There is this bend in the road where boughs from opposite sides of the road embrace each other to form a series of archways. With the morning fog and the low angle of light, it is simply ethereal.
I recently got a hold of some really thin and translucent Xuan. The kid in me urges me to experiment with it. I wanted to see if I could reassemble this image of depth and light and shadows by using this Xuan as a layer, as in photo editing .
So on this "background" layer, which is a fiber board with glued on canvas, I started to write down what I considered background information; footprint of the trail, trees in a distance.
There was a large fir tree flanking the right side of the trail. At first I was ambiguous as whether to treat it as background or top layer. But then I thought what the heck, I laid it down anyways. If I wasn't happy with it sitting in the background, I could paint it again on the top layer. Perhaps the 2 layers combined would give it more depth?
Just to be sure, I found a partially painted piece of this special Xuan and laid the vacant portion over the fir tree. It did not show through at all, to my horror! Then I wet down the Xuan to make it more translucent. Now the bottom image is coming through!
So this little test validated my concept of top and bottom layers and now I can forge ahead. My next concern is whether the bottom layer will come through like the way I envisioned it to be. After all this is not not Photoshop where I can adjust the degree of opacity of the different layers.
No comments:
Post a Comment