How to Create a Color Palette for Your Art Practice
- Step 1: Go Exploring. First, simply find a few images that you like.
- Step 2: Identify a Theme. Now, review your collection, whether it's online or off.
- Step 3: Expand Your Theme.
- Step 4: Build a Color Palette.
- Step 5: Mix Your Colors.
- Step 6: Make Some Art!
What can I use as a palette for acrylic paint?
Reusable Palettes without Covers: Glass, ceramic, enameled metal, or plastic palettes can be used. We do not recommend the use of Plexiglas or other types of acrylic sheeting, as acrylic paints and mediums can adhere permanently. Enameled butcher trays have raised sides to allow covering.
How do you make custom acrylic paint colors?
You can start by combining equal parts primary colors (red, yellow, and blue) to create a brown color. Then, depending on skin tone, start adding in more of one color, as well as some dark blue, black, or white as needed. (Remember to use black paint sparingly, as a little goes a very long way.)
How do you lay out a palette?
The most common way to lay out ones palette is from light to dark; whites, yellows, reds, browns, blues, blacks. Squeeze your paint at the edge of the palette so you have access to the largest area. Similarly spread your colours out around the palette.
What is the simplest way to create a color palette?
One of the simplest ways to create a professional looking color scheme is to take a few tones, tints, and shades of a given color (avoiding the pure hue), and then add in another pure hue (or close to pure) that's at least three spaces away on the color wheel (part of a tetradic, triatic, or split-complementary color
How do I choose a color palette for my paintings?
If you want to paint subtle still life paintings, choose muted earth colours. If you want very bright, vivid abstracts, you might need some more man-made pigments that have a higher colour saturation. My suggested basic acrylic colour palette is somewhere in-between. It allows bright colour mixtures as well as subtle.