Barbara A. King 

Oil Painting Demonstration - Peacock Feathers

Oil Painting Demonstration - Peacock Feathers

Materials Used for this Painting

My Palette of Colors


Acrylic Yellow Lemon

Dioxazine Purple

Cobalt Blue

Indigo

Cobalt Turquoise

Raw sienna

Perlene Red

Thalo Yellow Green

Viridian

Ultramarine Violet

Raw Umber

Sap Green

Van Dyke Brown

Warm White

Metallic Gold

(One Coat Glazing Medium)

(Two Coats damar Varnish)

My Brushes

# 6 Bright

# 4 Bright

# 2 Bright

# 0 Bright

# 2 red Sable flat

Small soft mop brush

10 X 30 Canvas or what ever you have.

STEP 1

Cover the canvas with lemon Yellow acrylic paint. You can draw your peacock feathers on the canvas. Your lines will notshow. I do not draw in the lines when I paint. I did this so you all can see the shape of how to start a peacock feather. The main part of the feather is shaped like an egg.

Start with what I call the eye.

Work your way out to the outside of the feather.

Oil colors for the eye: Cobalt Blue, Indigo, Dioxazine purple.

Make a mix of these colors for the eye.

Brush in the mixed colors for the eye.



First ring around the eye. Cobalt Turquoise, using a sharp chiseled edge of the brush. Go in the direction that the feathers grow,around the eye with short strokes. Now blend and soften
 the edge, with a clean dry soft mop.







Second Ring: Mix Raw Sienna and a small amount of Perlene red # 6 Bright brush. The brush should always have a very chiseled edge. Soften edge with soft mop brush.


Third Ring: Mix Tholo Yellow Green and Viridian With # 4 or 6 Bright what ever brush works better for you. Always use short strokes at the top of the feathers. I can never say this enough “CHISELED EDGE”.



Next Ring: repeat second ring.









The last ring , mix Ultramarine Violet and Raw Umber with a # 2 Red Sable flat Brush.





Lightly pull lines though all the rings in the direction the feather grows. (to the top of the feather)



Used your mop brush very softly go over all the rings to smooth out any hard brush lines.



Feather Quills is a mix of your greens, purple, raw umber and warm white.

The top of your quill is your green mix. Middle quill is your purple and raw Umber mix. Bottom of the quill is warm white.

Blend the colors together were the colors meet.

When all your feathers are done and quills are done, move to the outer edge of the feathers.


Now the fun begins!!

Mix Sap green and Van Dyke Brown more to the green side. Use a # 6 Bright. Your brush should have a very very chiseled edge.

Keep your feather lines very close together. If you have a maulstick , this would be the time to use it to steady your hand.

This part of the painting takes a lot of time and patience. The feathers must be from the top to the bottom of the quill. You can fill in as you go. You will be going back and forth to your palette many times to reload your brush. You will also have to see what feathers are going to be in the background and what feathers are in the foreground.


When your painting is dry you may use a light coat of metallic gold on your painting. Use the Metallic gold only on your eye and feather rings. This is optional.

When your painting is dry, put a thin coat of glazing medium on your painting. When the medium is dry use one coat damar varnish on your painting. Six months later put your second coat of damar varnish on your painting.

When I painted Proud Peacock I did things a little different with the background. I did not use an acrylic paint. I used a mix of gel, cadmium yellow and titanium white. This is for you people who don’t mind waiting for a background to dry.

I hope you all enjoy painting peacock feathers. Just a little note to all the people who are new oil painters. Never give up and don’t let any one tell you, you will never be a good painter.

If you have any questions, please contact me.
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