Watercolour Guide Beginners Materials
Secrets… I don’t have any I won’t share! I’m quite happy to pass along the art tips, techniques and shortcuts I’ve learned over the years….with a little ‘mini’ Watercolour Guide.
Art Materials for Watercolour Beginners
What should I buy? Where do I find them?
Start Slow and Build Up
Should I get all the paints right away?
Start with just a couple of versatile colours. Treat yourself to quality that will encourage your efforts. Don’t splash out with 8-12 tubes, 5 brushes, and a couple of pads of paper. Why? Cost. And its too easy to get overwhelmed by too many colours.
You’d be better off, for right now, with 2 tubes of paint. One good full sheet of paper to cut up and just one brush. You can slowly, add to these as you go.
WATERCOLOUR PAINTS
Which colours should I get?
If you decide to get 2 colours, I’d suggest prussian blue pb27 and burnt sienna PBr7 as these will pair up to create some lovely landscapes. Beautiful range of blues, greens, browns, rusty oranges are all possible.
If you decide to get 3 colours, I’d suggest cobalt blue pb28, winsor lemon py175 and permanent rose pv19; this triad makes an ideal group for 100’s of colour mixes. Everything from soft lavenders, moss greens, fiery scarlets and sunflower yellows.
Then, when you are ready…. That is, when mud is no longer a major factor in your paintings. The next paints would be Ultramarine blue pb29 and burnt sienna PBr7. These 2 combined will create ideal greys, blacks and chocolates. Plus, when mixed with the other paints you will increase your colour mixing range immensely.
Down the track, would be Prussian blue pb27 and Raw Sienna PBr7 (or Quinacridone Gold, or Nickel Azo Yellow, or Quinacridone Sienna.) Cerulean blue genuine, Indanthrone blue, Permanent Alizarin Crimson.
Note we are staying away from the Opaque thick paints like Cadmiums, Yellow Ochre, Brick Red. Too easy to get mud from these as beginners.
Paint brands I have had success with most of their range are: Daniel Smith, Winsor and Newton, Blockx, Graham, Holbein, Art Spectrum, Maimeri.
You can see that the Maimeri watercolour Ultramarine Blue pb29 is quite a rich deep blue and merges beautifully with the red violet of Verzino PR122 creating a most lovely purple.
BRUSHES
Watercolour Brushes that make good choices for Beginners would be: the Rekab 320s #2 squirrel hair brush, if you can only get 1 brush, this is the brush to get. Other brushes I often use are a wide Hake, a flat nylon brush, a Chinese brush, and a long rigger. Thats it.
The Werner Mertz Watercolor Paper Handbook is one of the best references for beginners to review to help guide their choices on paper selection. It has detailed in depth text with paintings on the specific papers described.
WATERCOLOUR PAPER
Watercolour Paper is more economical to buy in packets of 10 sheets, or even a single full sheet rather than in small ready to use pads which will be marked up quite a bit. You pay for that convenience.
A good 100% cotton rag paper is the most helpful and far cheaper in the long run, as you can use front and back sides. As well as rinse it off, dry it, and paint again using watercolours. The paper that will withstand rough and tumble use is Arches Rough 300gsm.
Cellulose papers just don’t have the oomph and sturdiness to hold up properly and to let you scrape, gouge, and lift paint off without tearing, streaking and blotting.
PAINTING PALETTE
A nice big Palette rather than a teensy tiny one will allow for mixing up the correct amount of paint the first go. Tiny palettes are notorious for this problem. Cheap Joes, Jerrys, etc. will have quite an assortment of palettes to choose from.
Where to Purchase your art supplies?
Where’s the best place to get my art supplies?
I live in Perth, W.A. Australia so I need to carefully source my materials. Freight to one of the most isolated cities in the world, is expensive.
My solution, I look online.
I’ve been a regular with several online art supply stores over the past 25 years and have built up a trust factor with them. Some are overseas, some are within the country. I do have to weigh up the freight shipping cost factor. It is all about cost justification.
Daniel Smith Art Supplies based in Seattle, Washington has a excellent range of watercolour paints. I can rely on their products. I’ve been doing so since 1991.
Cheap Joe’s Art has a huge range of all sorts of art and craft materials; papers, brushes, palette knives, paints, inks, you name it and I’m sure they have it. A fun place to window shop.
Jerry’s Artarama is another great resource with a versatile range of art and craft products that one can easily, and accidentally, get a little ‘art happy’ in.
Jacksons Art shop has several shops in Perth, has multiple stores in Australia; staff have always been more than helpful, courteous and friendly. A good range
Oxlades in Australia has opened up a brand in north Perth that offers some lovely artist quality materials with a great range of papers, paints and supplies.
The Art Shop in Victoria Australia has a nice online shop that offers great brushes and paints, Rekab brushes and Venezia paints.
The Art Scene in Sydney, Australia has an excellent range of art supplies, books, papers, inks, paints for the artist.
My new Page, Watercolour Guide is now up;
and for you watercolour enthusiasts, I’m going to be continuing the Watercolour Guide Project and updating it regularly. So, be sure to check in on it every so often to see what is new there!



