Painting Foregrounds: Perspective Tips
Depth and perspective in paintings can be tricky at first for beginners.
But it gets a lot easier when you know and follow a couple of logical and simple tips and guidelines.
Salt Pan Lake landscape watercolors debiriley.art
NT Gorge
Simplify The Subject
Break it up into simplified segments.
Divide the scene into divisions of Background, Middleground and Foreground.
Straight away this helps you to identify more easily what to do, in each of these areas.
I’ve listed below some of the most important steps regarding painting the foreground.
1. Foregrounds generally will have warmer colours in front, ie scarlets, terracottas, oranges, golden ambers, olive
2. Foregrounds generally will have sharper, more in focus, harder edges
3. Foregrounds generally will have deeper stronger tonal values
4. Foregrounds generally will have more texture, details, variations, contrasts
(Keep in mind that the further away an object is, it becomes less sharp, less detailed, less bright, contrasty, less textured and less varied.)
Morning Breaks, watercolour landscape
This example shows how dark the foreground is as well as being more sharp in focus than the background.
Green HIlls Watercolor
This example shows how the tones are darker in the foreground, the edges are sharper, there is more detail, more contrasts, and there is more warmth in the colors in the foreground than the background.
Gum Tree in the Bush debiriley.art
This example shows the foreground being warmer, darker, more detailed, more textured, sharper edged than the background.