I’ve been flirting with the idea of taking up painting for months, but kept finding excuses not to try. I don’t have space for it. Supplies are expensive. I already have too many hobbies and not enough time. Still, I kept thinking about it. I tried to scratch the itch to create with colour through embroidery and beading, but it didn’t quite work. One day, someone I follow posted a story on Instagram of a picture they spotted at HomeSense. Something about that image drew my eye; it stayed in my mind.
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A few days later, I went to HomeSense to see if I could find it, or something similar. I didn’t. Instead, I found a set of acrylic paints, brushes, and some canvases. The universe seemed to be saying something to me.
So I listened.
My first attempt at painting was, ahem, a solid effort.
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Ok, fine, it wasn’t much good but I found that I enjoyed the process anyway. For my next attempt, I tried something a little safer: a still life of flowers. I like big, bold swaths of colour so I decided to pursue a primitive style – which, not entirely coincidentally – suits my drawing and painting abilities just fine. I was (and still am) quite pleased with the result.
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I decided to get a little more adventurous. This is where I started to learn a bit about layering and building colour. I like to learn by doing, rather than following how-tos, so my lessons are haphazard at best. On the plus side, I find it helps me to develop my own style at my own pace.
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Next, I turned my attention to landscapes. Again, with the first try, I was inspired by a picture I saw on social media (and, sadly, didn’t save) but I tweaked it to work with birch trees rather than pines. This was a lesson in building texture, dry-brushing, and layering again. The result was still a bit “naif” but with some decent effects here and there.
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Emboldened, I decided to level up again. Here in Alberta, we have beautiful prairie vistas. There is something both simple and incredibly majestic about a flat horizon and huge skies. I thought the latter, in particular, would give me scope to do big, bold things with colour and texture. What I didn’t know … was that clouds (like water) are among the hardest things to paint well. Oops.
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Nevertheless, I think this was a solid effort. As a sidenote, this was the first piece I sold! After I posted it on IG, someone contacted me to ask if she could buy it, and since she lived locally, I thought “why not?” It’s wonderful and also kind of intimidating to think of my work hanging in someone’s house.
Anyway, I hadn’t learned my lesson about clouds yet, it seemed, so I leveled up again – to a sunset. Because what could be more fun than an extra dramatic sunset, right? Well, the bloody thing was nearly the undoing of my painting hobby. I lost track of how many layers of paint I went through before I was finally somewhat satisfied with it.
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Ugh, no more skies for a while. I think it’s time to tackle some cacti š
Have you picked up a new hobby out of the blue? How did it go? Do you prefer to learn by watching/following directions, or by doing/hands on?