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"Pastel on Dark Paper - Just Add Light"
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Author: Michael_Newberry, Contributing Editor

Mini-Tutorial:
Pastel on Dark Paper - Just Add Light


Pastel and dark paper is a great combo to create light effects.
Whenever I am a little stressed or some of my big projects weigh on my mind I get out the pastels and some nice black or beautifully dark paper, like a Cansons, and go to town.

I love working pastel on dark paper for one important reason: the pastel being lighter than the paper directly creates a pure colored light.

I remember being in a kind of down mood and when Kimberly arrived to model I wanted to shake off that mood and feel free. We collaborated on this pose, one quite difficult to hold for more than a 2 or 3 minutes.

The paper is black Cansons, 19 x 26".

You can start with any color you like but it is important that the tone of the pastel is is only one notch lighter than the paper. Just enough so that you can see your marks. The blue outlines here is Prussian Blue, one of the darker blues.

The idea is to gradually add light and color one tone at a time starting with those dark tones just one step lighter than the paper.

In this image I am beginning to block out the entire paper. The background walls in reality are white and the floor is a wood floor. When I work with pastel one of the things I ask myself is the color warmer or cooler. The white of wall is cool and the orange of the floor is warm. Then taking a cool dark color, almost any kind of blue or green that is one step lighter than the paper, I blocked out the background wall. Then, with the same idea, yet with a warm color, a dark burnt orange, I did the floor, her body, and the shadow of the cloth.

My particular style of mark making with pastel is hatching. I like to keep the color as pure and direct as possible and layer different colors one on top of another to create nuance.

Its also important to leave some space between the hatching, to let the paper come through. There is limited "tooth" to the paper and if you solidly cover the paper, after 10 steps down the road, the pastel won't "take" anymore. In other words there is nothing there for the pastel to adhere to and nothing happens.
Here is the completed blocked out image. The cloth in real life is Canary Yellow, and I blocked it in with a dark orange about two tones lighter than the paper - I knew it was going to have more layers of color added to it.
Now comes the light part. My focus here is to add another layer of color in the light areas, one step lighter than what came before. Parts of background wall and floor are in dark shadow, I am leaving them alone.

I like to add one layer of light in an area, careful to step up the tone slowly, then stop and go to another area. Here I brought up the yellow cloth, then I went to floor and her body. Then I added a third light to the cloth and to her body. Notice the slight pinkish quality of her chest in contrast to the gold of the cloth.

One technique of looking I cannot stress enough is squinting your eyes to look about you and squint and compare with your drawing. Squinting keeps your focus on the essential tones of the light and shadow. In other words it keeps your focus on the forest and not on the individual trees.

Note about mistakes: if you find that you messed up an area there are two quick solutions to that. One is two totally wipe out the area with a paper towel going all the way back to the original tone of the paper. Or, take a pastel that is the same color of the paper and gingerly hatch a few strokes of that in the area and it should refresh the area considerably.

Here I stepped back to re-asses where I was in the drawing. I went back into the background realizing its darkest area was lighter than the darkest area on the floor. I added more light to the cloth and added more detail to the light hitting Kimberly's body. And I add some hot color, red, to her left arm's casted shadow.
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