Skip to content
  • Help
  • Home
  • Art
  • LearnExpand
    • Self-Guided Courses
    • Videos & ArticlesExpand
      • All Videos & Articles (newest first)
      • Postcard Paint-Alongs
      • Watercolor Technical How-to
      • Color and Color Mixing
      • Supplies and Materials
      • Tips & Hacks
      • Sketching
      • Planning Your Own Watercolors
      • Finding Your Style
      • Creative Energy Journaling
  • Studio
  • About
  • ShopExpand
    • Art & Gifts

Reflections in Calm Water
Planning Your Own Watercolors | Technical How-to

Reflections in Calm Water

Look over my shoulder as I paint the subpaintings to help me decide how I want to paint reflections on calm water.

Read More Reflections in Calm WaterContinue

Planning a watercolor, part 2: Using subpaintings
Finding Your Style | Planning Your Own Watercolors | Postcard Paint-Alongs

Planning a watercolor, part 2: Using subpaintings

A subpainting is a small excerpt of the larger painting, used to solve a problem in isolation, make stylistic choices or try creative alternatives. Think “Crop, don’t shrink!” It’s also a great way to find a quick and easy postcard idea inside a more complex image.

Read More Planning a watercolor, part 2: Using subpaintingsContinue

Adjusting granulation
Color and Color Mixing | Supplies and Materials | Technical How-to

Adjusting granulation

Some watercolor pigments produce granulation (a.k.a. sedimentation), a mottled or speckly appearance as the wash dries. Did you know that you can sometimes coax more or less granulation out of the same pigment? Here’s how.

Read More Adjusting granulationContinue

Planning a watercolor, part 1: Why I stopped doing thumbnails, value studies and color studies
Finding Your Style | Planning Your Own Watercolors

Planning a watercolor, part 1: Why I stopped doing thumbnails, value studies and color studies

Why I stopped doing traditional thumbnails, value studies and color studies to plan my watercolors.

Read More Planning a watercolor, part 1: Why I stopped doing thumbnails, value studies and color studiesContinue

Don’t Ask “How Can I Paint ___ in Watercolor?” Instead, Flip the Question
Finding Your Style | Planning Your Own Watercolors

Don’t Ask “How Can I Paint ___ in Watercolor?” Instead, Flip the Question

Try exploring different watercolor effects and “textures” and asking “What does this watercolor effect remind me of? What could I use it to suggest?”

Read More Don’t Ask “How Can I Paint ___ in Watercolor?” Instead, Flip the QuestionContinue

Strategies for Dealing with Lookie-Loos
Sketching

Strategies for Dealing with Lookie-Loos

Is this the picture in your head when you think about painting on location? I’ve never had anything like this happen, but just imagining it kept me from going out to paint or sketch in public for a loooong time. Even if no one laughs at your work, there are other annoying encounters with onlookers…

Read More Strategies for Dealing with Lookie-LoosContinue

Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 2
Sketching | Supplies and Materials

Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 2

Some fast and easy watercolor sketchbooks you can make yourself from the paper you usually paint on. (Part 2 of 2)

Read More Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 2Continue

Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 1
Sketching | Supplies and Materials

Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 1

Some fast and easy watercolor sketchbooks you can make yourself from the paper you usually paint on. (Part 1 of 2)

Read More Easy DIY “Low-Stress” Watercolor Sketchbooks, Part 1Continue

Avoiding Overwhelm When Sketching on Location (or Working from a Photo)
Planning Your Own Watercolors | Sketching

Avoiding Overwhelm When Sketching on Location (or Working from a Photo)

To avoid overwhelm while sketching (or working from a complicated photo), collect “characters” now, arrange them to tell a story later.

Read More Avoiding Overwhelm When Sketching on Location (or Working from a Photo)Continue

Tips for Mixing Darks and Shadow Colors
Color and Color Mixing | Technical How-to | Tips & Hacks

Tips for Mixing Darks and Shadow Colors

A few tips for mixing darks and shadow colors in watercolor, including shadows on yellow and red objects.

Read More Tips for Mixing Darks and Shadow ColorsContinue

Your Studio Journal

How to Use the Course Videos

Companionship and Encouragement, not “how-to” The videos in this course are not technical instruction. For the most part, it’s just me sharing a few thoughts about the day’s thinking prompt, and working in my journal on the day’s activity prompt. Think of it more like working together with a friend. A friend who doesn’t mind…

Read More How to Use the Course VideosContinue

Your Studio Journal

How to Use This Course

Prompts are Not Requirements The prompts are there for you to use, or not, as suits you in the moment. You can always choose to go your own way, especially if you are on fire to keep going on something from an earlier module or a project you’re working on.  You can write a journal…

Read More How to Use This CourseContinue

Page navigation

Previous PagePrevious 1 … 3 4 5 6 7 … 23 Next PageNext

Collections

  • Creative Energy Journaling
  • Planning Your Own Watercolors
  • Technical How-to
  • Postcard Paint-Alongs
  • Tips & Hacks
  • Studio
  • Sketching
  • Supplies and Materials
  • Color and Color Mixing
  • Finding Your Style
Get new posts by email!
  • Home
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Refund/Cancellation Policy for Classes and Events
  • Website Terms & Conditions (“Terms of Use”)

© 2025 Dragonfly Spirit Studio

Review Cart

No products in the cart.

  • Home
  • Art
  • Learn
  • Studio
  • Shop
  • Cart
  • Help
Search