How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (2024)

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (1)

Watercolour is a mesmerising, magical medium and you’d like to have a go. You feel the pull to be creative, but you just don’t know where to start. You feel overwhelmed and unsure, so you might just put it off.

Trust me, I’ve been there. And then I started painting one day, and I’ve never looked back! If you want to get started with painting watercolour, here are my top tips on watercolour basics to get going.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (2)

Get your supplies

It helps to get prepped! Here’s what you need:

  • Watercolour paint
  • Watercolour paper
  • A brush
  • A jar of water
  • A paper towel

If you already have these watercolour supplies then you’re all set! If not, you can pick these up at any art and craft store or online shop.

Don’t worry about having the ‘right’ supplies – just paint with whatever you’ve got! Lots of people put off starting because they don’t have the right paper/brush/exact paint colour someone else recommended. But the only way to start painting is to pick up a brush and give it a go!

If you’re feeling overwhelmed by all the possible supplies and don’t know what to choose, download my free guide to watercolour supplies! It tells you what to look for, such as whether you’d prefer pans and tubes or what the difference is between hot and cold-pressed paper. Plus, I’ve included my full supply list covering everything I paint with every day.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (3)

Paint what you fancy

Now’s the time to put paint to paper. The best way to start painting watercolour is to pick a subject you feel drawn to. If you want to paint flowers, paint flowers! If you’re drawn to sunsets or galaxies or unicorns or landscapes, paint those.

Some people feel they need to start with theory and colour wheels or practice painting human hands to learn how to sketch and shade – you don’t! Paint whatever tickles your fancy. It’s your creative time – spend it doing what you love.

Start small

My top tip for getting started with watercolour is to begin small! When I was learning to paint, I would start large paintings with multiple layers, lots of colour mixes and intricate details, and get stressed and overwhelmed two hours into the process, when it didn’t turn out like I wanted.

I found much more success with smaller pieces, doodles and five-minute paintings. Even just practising brush strokes is a good way to begin! I still use this to warm-up before launching into a bigger piece. If the empty white page has you paralysed, try cutting it into smaller pieces – it immediately seems less daunting.

Paint something abstract

A really easy exercise for watercolour beginners is to paint a bunch of shapes. Try painting a page full of circles, allowing them to touch and blend together. Or try squares, triangles, wavy lines – just make shapes and play around with the paints and the colours. Then you don’t need to worry about it resembling anything in particular.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (4)

Paint what you see

If you want to get started with watercolour but find that your imagination doesn’t translate well to paper, it helps to stay grounded. Paint the objects around you – fruit, flowers, something in your home, a mug of coffee, your family members, the view from your window. Whatever you can see, just put that on the paper.

Use a tutorial

There are hundreds of watercolour tutorials online for you to learn to paint pretty much anything! Every subject, technique and style have plenty of tutorials to choose from. If you want free watercolour tutorials, look for step-by-step guides and video tutorials on YouTube, including my channel!

There are also hundreds of classes on Skillshare, which is an online learning platform that’s popular with artists. It has a fee, but you can get 2 months free with my affiliate link. If you don’t want to pay, do as many tutorials as you can in that time and then cancel the subscription.

Copy another artist

It is totally OK to copy work from another artist. It’s something that art students have been doing for centuries, and it’s a great way to learn exactly how the artist created a certain style or technique.

However, it’s important that you don’t copy work and post it online as your own creation, or try and sell it. Copying is for learning only. If you do want to post it online, make sure you clearly credit the artist who created it and make it clear that it’s a copy of their work.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (5)

Keep an inspiration file

Does this sound familiar? Your head is full of ideas on what to paint. And then you sit down in front of the paper, and your mind goes totally blank! You can’t think of a single thing to paint. If you feel like that, you’re not alone.

Many artists keep an inspiration file for just this moment. It can be a physical file or online, and it just needs to contain anything and everything that you inspire. Save photos, leaves, scraps of paper, other artist’s work, feathers, scraps of coloured paper – anything that you like the look of. Make a mood board or Pinterest board to inspire you. I also write lists of things I want to paint, when I get a moment of inspiration but don’t have time to paint right there.

Let go of perfection

I hold my hands up to being a perfectionist, so I promise you I know exactly how you feel. Perfectionism is about placing unreasonable pressure on yourself. It means that you struggle to accept making mistakes, and put off doing anything that might be difficult or result in failure. It’s paralysing because it prevents you starting anything.

Watercolour isn’t the best medium for perfectionists and control-freaks! The unpredictable nature of working with water means that the results are not entirely under your control. It can actually really help you let go of expectations and take the pressure off yourself.

Remember that your painting doesn’t need to be perfect or a masterpiece – it just needs to be fun.

Making art is not about the finished piece, it’s about the process. Pick up your paintbrush and create something, without worrying about how it looks at the end.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (6)

Stop comparing yourself!

Social media is full of people sharing their amazing work. And while this is inspiring, it can also be intimidating. But it’s so important not to compare yourself or feel discouraged. Remember that the work you see from others might be their hundredth painting, or their thousandth! It’s not fair to compare your first paintings to that. I promise you their first paintings looked just like yours!

Also, remember that people almost never post pictures of their failures or pieces that just didn’t work out. I have a MOUNTAIN of failed, ugly paintings that I never show on social media. Some days, I hate every single thing I paint. That is OK.

You should only compare your painting to a previous work from yesterday, last month, a year ago.

Just make a mess!

So many would-be painters feel paralysed, afraid to make a mistake, waste paper or create something ugly. But I have the perfect antidote for that – give yourself permission to make a mess! Splatter your paper, or get it wet and add blobs of paint at random.

Think like a child when they make art – they just make a mess and have fun. You can do that too, even as an adult. Then put your work on the fridge to display it, and come back tomorrow to paint again. Try making an abstract painting in watercolour for an easy start!

Keep reading
  • My art journey - How I started painting in watercolours
  • Wet on dry watercolour technique
  • Wet on wet watercolour technique
  • How to create watercolour gradients
  • Watercolour masterclass for beginners
  • Christmas botanicals watercolour class

Get 2 FREE weeks of Skillshare access!

Want to try out Skillshare? Use my referral link to get your first 14 days for free, when you sign up! You can take any of the classes on the platform – there are hundreds available on any kind of watercolour topic or technique.

You simply need to click on the link below, make an account and start watching your first class! You have two months to try out the platform – if you don’t like it, you can cancel at any time during your trial period and you won’t be charged.

How to Get Started with Watercolour Painting | Emily Wassell (2024)

FAQs

What is the golden rule of watercolor? ›

There are two fundamental techniques in watercolor painting. You can't escape them… they are: Wet-on-wet and wet-on-dry. Together, these techniques form a golden rule that is unique to watercolors, and highlights the broad range of possibilities in watercolor painting.

How to get started with watercolour painting? ›

First, start with a palette of watercolors. Next, use a small spray bottle, a blunt art syringe, or a spoon to hydrate the colors you wish to use. Then, dip your brush in water to moisten it, dab the brush onto a pigment, and put the pigment-rich brush on paper. That's it!

Can you teach yourself watercolour painting? ›

I teach myself to paint every day.

I used to feel a little self-deprecating about my status as a self-taught artist, but over the years I've realized that every artist is self-taught. The skills required for using watercolor with confidence can't be achieved except through use, no matter how many classes you take.

What is the most basic watercolor technique? ›

There are 2 basic watercolor techniques that will be fundamental to your practice—wet-on-wet and wet-on-dry. In this tutorial, I cover what these terms mean, when to use each of the two techniques, and how to do it successfully.

What is normally painted first on a watercolor? ›

At the beginning of each painting the pigment to water ratio is important. You want to start with light values, so this means diluted paint and light tones should be painted first. Each new layer of paint makes the passage you're working on a little bit darker.

Do you sketch before watercolor? ›

Sketching is an important step that allows you to plan, compose, and refine your ideas before applying vibrant washes of watercolor. With a sketch as your guide, your watercolor paintings will flourish with intention and artistic vision.

What part of a watercolor picture do you paint first? ›

In general, if you want the background color to show through and become part of the subject, then paint the wash first. If you want to keep your background and your subject clearly and distinctly separate, then be sure to use masking fluid to mask your subject before painting your wash.

When painting with watercolor What should you always do before you start painting? ›

Before you start painting you need to mix some paint. Choose any color you like. Begin by getting your brush nice and wet so that it soaks up plenty of liquid. Then load it with water and press it against you mixing palette to release a puddle of water.

Is watercolor hard for beginners? ›

The unpredictable nature of watercolor paints makes them seem difficult to learn. But once you understand the underlying characteristics, watercolor is no more difficult than other painting mediums. And it has many advantages.

What is the theory of watercolour? ›

In watercolor painting you control the water to pigment ratio to create the relative lightness and darkness of your paint. For example, a lot of water mixed with very little paint will create a very light color; a little bit of water mixed with a good bit of paint will create a dark color. !

What is the golden ratio rule in art? ›

The golden ratio in art: the promise of harmony

This mathematical formula is considered by some as a universal rule of beauty. With a proportion equal to x²=x+1, the golden ratio in art creates a balanced relationship that the mind's eye loves.

What is the golden rule in art? ›

The golden ratio is found when a line is divided into two parts such that the whole length of the line divided by the long part of the line is also equal to the long part of the line divided by the short part of the line.

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