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| Let us recall our lesson on sunset and sunrise and remember the effect of atmosphere on light rays. Remember how the mist intercepted the long blue rays and let the red through? Now that 'mist' becomes a piece of glass or plastic, a solid but semi -transparent medium. In the first example below the reddish pigment particles suspended in the glass are sparsely arranged. As with the earth's atmosphere at sunset the pigment particles in the glass absorb the blue-green light rays. This has a dual effect. (Fig 1.) 1. It reflects the red light rays back to the observer making the glass appear red. 2. It allows some of the red rays through to strike the surface behind. Here, that surface (green), absorbs some of the red rays. This tends to slightly neutralize the color. If the green was stronger the shadow would be grey.
The principle regarding transparency is useful when painting with semi-transparent dark paint as the value depth of the darks can be increased. As opposed to opaque darks, transparent dark allows light to penetrate the surface before reflecting back off what is underneath. This has the effect of filtering out light rays on the way in as well as on the way out thus allowing less of the light rays to escape and for our eyes to read richer, more ineresting darks. Application ... THE SEMI-TRANSPARENT RED RUBY RING
1. Create an oval and smear with shades of red allowing a transparency around the edges. You could do this with a semi-transparent crimson red like alizarin. The rest is pure fiction and applied logic ... a) Light source (top left) determines the position of the shadow as well as the position of the reflected light on the stone.
c) The horizontal bands on the ring band define its texture and roundness. The elliptical shadow reinforces this assumption. Here again this object is not drawn from anything real. It is a pure construction using logic and remembered observation. [ Lesson Index ] [ Previous Lesson ] [ Next Lesson ] |