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  • Hi, welcome back.

  • Certainly glad you could join us today, for this is

  • the last show of the 22nd Joy of Painting series.

  • So I'll tell you what, let's start out today, and have them

  • run all the colors across the screen that you

  • need to paint along with this.

  • While they're doing that, let me show

  • you what I've got planned for today.

  • Today, as you can plainly see, I have

  • a canvas here that's painted with a black gesso.

  • I've allowed it to dry completely, and then

  • on top of that, put a thin even coat of liquid clear.

  • We put the clear on there only because it makes

  • putting transparent color on top of this,

  • much much easier.

  • You really don't have to have it, but it makes

  • your life so much easier.

  • Then on top of the clear, I put a mixture of

  • sap green, pthalo blue, and a little Van Dyck brown

  • to dull it down.

  • And I thought today we'll just do a happy little scene,

  • maybe that's deep in the woods.

  • I've had a lot of requests for paintings that have

  • big trees in them, so.

  • Let me just show you an easy, easy way

  • to do just that.

  • Let's take an old two inch brush today.

  • Take the corner of it, just the corner,

  • and go into a little bit of titanium white.

  • Then let's go up in here.

  • Now once again, this has green and blue and

  • a little brown on it.

  • So, color will just jump out at you.

  • All you have to do is just take and put a

  • little bit of white on there, and watch what happens.

  • It's beautiful, beautiful.

  • This is a fantastic painting to do as a demonstration

  • for friends or relatives or just people who are going to

  • watch you paint, and dont let them see you put

  • the color on, and they'll think you started with a

  • blank canvas, and then you touch it with a little

  • bit of white, and they'll, they'll absolutely think

  • that magic is happening.

  • And, you don't have to tell them any different.

  • Let them try to figure out how to do it.

  • But these are truly a joy to do, and the black canvases

  • might very well be my favorites.

  • There. Just spin it and work it, keep it going, move it.

  • Just have fun with it. Just have fun with it, and let it go.

  • There. Okay.

  • Now i'll just keep adding a little touch

  • of white here and there.

  • And if we're going to have deep, deep woods, this

  • is a nice way of making a background.

  • Maybe we'll put some big trees in here.

  • This is a nice way of making a background

  • that you can see between the trees,

  • and it looks like a lot of things that are happening,

  • and you didn't have to hardly work at all

  • to do it.

  • And this is truly the lazy man's way of painting.

  • That's why I'm here. There.

  • All right. Now then.

  • A little bit more on this corner, and let's put a little

  • over in here too.

  • Be sure to leave some nice dark areas in here.

  • Don't just cover it all up. Don't cover it all up.

  • And the other thing is you can do this

  • with any transparent color, or semi-transparent color.

  • It don't have to be totally transparent.

  • Semi-transparent.

  • And the way to tell if the paint is transparent,

  • what i'd do, is just take a little put on my finger

  • and touch the black.

  • If it's transparent enough for this,

  • it'll still look black.

  • The canvas will still look black.

  • You will know immediately whether

  • it's transparent enough to do this.

  • Some colors, like the cadmium yellow, the white,

  • are very opaque.

  • Other colors are semi-transparent, and some

  • are very tranparent.

  • So, test a little.

  • You'll find exactly what you're looking for that way.

  • All right.

  • We just sort of wind it up and play with it

  • here and there.

  • And when you're doing this, maybe it's a good thing

  • to step back and take a look-see and

  • see what it looks like.

  • If it needs to be blended more, just

  • blend it a little more.

  • Sometimes you need to go back and add

  • some little light spots or you could even

  • go back with the original color,

  • the green and the blue, and put dark

  • back in here if you wanted to.

  • If you overdo this light.

  • There.

  • Just sort of wind it up like a ...

  • Ok down here at the bottom, I want it to be

  • much darker, so I'm not putting much color here.

  • I want it to really look like it's far away.

  • Something like that.

  • All right.

  • Then very lightly just brush across it,

  • and that will take out the brush strokes and

  • let you sort of take a look at what you have.

  • And if you have one that you don't like, or it's

  • too bright, you can change it.

  • Or you could move it, anything that you want to do.

  • Anything that you want to do in here.

  • All right.

  • Now then. Maybe, let's find an old thin brush today.

  • let's go ahead into a little touch of the,

  • a little touch of the midnight black.

  • Just load the brush full of color, and let's begin making

  • a few trees in the background back here.

  • In my mind I see a tree, it goes right there.

  • Just pull straight down, applying more pressure

  • as you work down the tree, and that will give you

  • a nice trunk, that easy.

  • That easy.

  • It's the easiest kind of tree to make there is.

  • Take a little white, a little white, be right back,

  • get a little touch of the bright red.

  • Just a little. It's very, very strong.

  • Eat up your whole world.

  • Okay, now, I'm gonna get a little bit more paint,

  • put it right here, and that one, we'll put

  • some of the pthalo blue.

  • Maybe even add a little black to that to dull it.

  • Thats better. Don't want it too bright.

  • Use black to dull. There, All right.

  • Now then. Clean the old knife.

  • In my world, today, I think the light is coming

  • from the right.

  • If you're right-handed, as I've mentioned before,

  • you will probably find that it's easier to have

  • the light coming from the right side.

  • So let's just start off here with the knife, and just

  • put the indication of a little highlight

  • right there on the edge here.

  • There. Now then.

  • A little bit of the bluish color, I'll put on the back.

  • Not a great deal. This is just to indicate a little

  • reflected light.

  • Now we take a little bit of the pure black,

  • and touch, all I'm doing is just taking the knife

  • and touching, just touching.

  • The canvas will pull of what it wants.

  • And this way you can blend all those colors together.

  • And it will actually give this tree texture.

  • When this painting is dry, you can actually

  • feel bark on it.

  • Of course you can feel it while it's wet too,

  • but it's gonna get all over your finger.

  • So just wait till it's dry.

  • Let's take, let's take, get some paint thinner,

  • go right into a little bit of the black,

  • a little black, pick a little bit of the dark sienna there.

  • Once in a while even some of the Van Dyck brown,

  • just to get a little brownish flavor.

  • A loaded brush full of color. Okay.

  • Now then.

  • We can put just indication here and there.

  • A few little limbs. Just a few.

  • Maybe these are evergreen trees out here.

  • Or whatever kind of trees you want.

  • Giant redwoods maybe. I don't know.

  • Just these, just friendly trees.

  • There. A few little arms sticking out on him.

  • Now then. We can take us a, here's one.

  • We'll take us an old two inch brush, and put a little

  • black on it, a little sap green, go right.

  • Of course the black and yellow will make green.

  • But black is once again just used to dull.

  • Just push. Tap a little color right on there.

  • And maybe, this little tree up here.

  • There's a few little limbs, leaves, that are

  • hanging out here.

  • Just use the corner of the brush, and sort of tap

  • some of these little rascals in.

  • There.

  • Just think about where little arms would stick out,

  • little leaves would grow.

  • It's the easiest way I've ever found of making

  • very effective, gorgeous trees.

  • There we are.

  • It's one of the things that we're doing demonstrations

  • for charity groups and PBS stations and stuff

  • around the country. When people see the paintings

  • that we do up close, one of the things that

  • I always hear, is that I never realized

  • there'd be that much detail on it

  • when I saw it up close.

  • So this really does work quite well.

  • It really is an exceptional amount of detail,

  • believe it or not.

  • Tell you what. Shoot. I just had another idea.

  • Maybe, I'll show you a couple of tricks.

  • Maybe, let's take, let's take, I get excited sometimes,

  • I begin seeing things in here.

  • I want to put, yeah, watch here, put a nice little

  • bush, right back here.

  • And I want this bush to be in front of this tree.

  • Show you how to put that little rascal

  • right back in the woods.

  • This bush, or collection of bushes, bushes,

  • lives right there.

  • Like that.

  • Maybe, maybe there's another old bush that

  • lives right here. Just sort of let your imagination go.

  • Wherever. Wherever.

  • Maybe might even have a friend here. There.

  • And, maybe, back here, let's get crazy.

  • Maybe. Watch, watch.

  • See here. I'm putting in all kinds of little areas.

  • There. Just sort of blend them together.

  • And all I'm doing is just tapping down, here and there.

  • Adding a little yellow ochre, a little Indian yellow,

  • a little bright red once in a while.

  • There. But not much of the bright red.

  • I think I'll keep this mostly in the greens.

  • Use the red to dull the green. Just to dull the green.

  • There we go. Okay. We got a whole bunch of bushes.

  • And, maybe come in right down here, there's a couple more.

  • But see already, that tree is being pushed back.

  • I want to push it back into the forest.

  • You didn't know you could move trees, did you?

  • Or maybe you did. Hmm. There we go.

  • There. Okay. Now.

  • Let's take ... let's put some trees in the foreground,

  • and really push everything back.

  • I'm going right back into the black here.

  • Maybe ... woozh, be brave. Right there beside.

  • At the bottom of this one, I'm gonna bring it

  • farther down.

  • So everything's behind it.

  • Everything is behind it.

  • This is a stronger tree.

  • Bigger.

  • And it may just be that it's closer to you, and

  • thats the kind of impression that we're trying to make here.

  • That it's just closer to you.

  • Maybe, maybe he's got a friend.

  • Well, we said we was gonna paint some big trees.

  • I think, I think these are big trees.

  • Big, strong trees.

  • Maybe, maybe we have a forest.

  • And when you're doing yours, you decide

  • how many paintings, or how many trees you

  • want in your painting.

  • How many paintings you want in your tree.

  • There we go.

  • Either way it works for you.

  • (laughs) We can start a whole new kind of

  • painting here.

  • All right. And if you're really brave, you can put

  • big trees in here.

  • I mean whooo, big, very strong tree.

  • So why is this, this is a number six fan brush,

  • and as wide as this brush is, I'm gonna make this one.

  • Big old trees.

  • Okay. Put a little grass around the bottom of that one.

  • Now then. Let's go back to our color that we had here.

  • This is a little bit of bright red and white.

  • Just let it float right down the tree.

  • This is just like you're laying snow on the mountain.

  • Just let it break, grab.

  • The canvas will literally pull off what it wants,

  • and give you back what's left.

  • Just like a tax man when you ... those do taxes.

  • There. Very nice looking.

  • As I mentioned earlier, this will look like

  • real bark when it's done.

  • It'll feel like real bark.

  • There. And you can make it as thick as you want.

  • That's one thing that's so fantastic about oil paints.

  • You can give texture to your painting.

  • Of course I guess you could do that with other paints.

  • Just find it much easier with oils to do.

  • There.

  • A little hard to get watercolor to build up

  • a quarter of an inch. (laughs)

  • There. Mix up a little more color.

  • And, we'll give this big tree here some.

  • Something like that. There.

  • Isn't that a fun way to paint big strong trees.

  • And you can do this, even if

  • you've never painted before.

  • This is one of the easiest, most effective ways

  • of making large trees.

  • Just, it's a pleasure to make them this way.

  • And they work.

  • And people will never believe you've done this.

  • Never believe it.

  • They'll be looking for the numbers, because

  • they'll know this is a paint by number thing.

  • There.

  • Okay.

  • Now take a little bit of that blue that we were using

  • for reflected light, and we're just gonna let

  • a little of that play down the back side.

  • Just a little. Right down through there.

  • There we go. A little bit here.

  • Like so. And down.

  • Shouldn't have done so many trees.

  • This is too repetitious. There.

  • Of course when you do yours, you decide

  • how many trees you want to have in your world.

  • maybe you want fewer, more, somewhere in between.

  • Doesn't matter.

  • As long as it makes you happy when you do it.

  • Painting does nothing else. It should make you happy.

  • Go right back into some black.

  • Let me clean off a spot to work.

  • Back into the midnight black.

  • And then once again, all I'm gonna do,

  • I'm just touching the canvas.

  • That's all we're doing. Just touch.

  • Get that little roll of paint, and touch.

  • It's so simple.

  • I think ... I think just about anybody can do this.

  • With never practicing even.

  • This particular part of it.

  • Some things need a little more practice than others.

  • This one is very easy and very effective.

  • That's the nice thing about it, a lot of things are easy,

  • but they don't look good when you're done.

  • This looks good. This looks good.

  • All right. There we go.

  • So I say this is the last show of the 22nd

  • Joy of Painting series.

  • It's almost unbelievable to me that we've done

  • this many shows.

  • With 22 series that means there's almost 300

  • half hour shows. Whew.

  • That's unreal. That's a record.

  • It's absolutely unsurpassed in television history.

  • I'm very proud of that.

  • And don't ever think that you do that many shows alone.

  • There's a lot of fantastic people that have worked with us,

  • To make it happen.

  • People like my wife Jane, Annette Kowalski,

  • and the people here at the television station.

  • Takes an effort on all of their parts

  • to bring this to you.

  • But most important, is the fact you watched the shows

  • and, and you liked them.

  • That's what keep us here.

  • So if you haven't seen all the shows,

  • as I said there are nearly 300 of them,

  • and you want to, give the station a call.

  • They're available too. They're available.

  • And if there's other things that you want to see

  • in future series, that we're not doing yet,

  • drop me a line.

  • Let me know what you want to see.

  • And if I cant do it, I'll try to find somebody who can,

  • bring them on as a guest artist.

  • There. But we can get it.

  • We can get it.

  • Let's take a little bit of black, line our brush,

  • and let's go in here and put the indication

  • back in here and there.

  • You'll have some nice little limbs and branches

  • that live back on these trees.

  • There we go.

  • And right there, and in here.

  • Now if you have trouble making this paint flow,

  • add a little bit more paint thinner.

  • I'm gonna put a lot of leaves, I think.

  • Of course I'm not gonna put every little stick and twig.

  • Sometimes it's fun to not put any leaves

  • and put a lot of little twigs.

  • It makes an interesting painting.

  • But it would be too boring for you to watch,

  • somebody sat here for thirty minutes

  • just putting leaves and limbs on these trees.

  • So, we'll just put a few in, show you how to do it.

  • And then when you do yours, you put as many in as you want.

  • Good.

  • Maybe, here's an old one, hangs down and comes across.

  • Don't have all of them just going right off from the side.

  • Look like your tree has somehow been just cut off.

  • Half of it's gone.

  • Need branches that go in every direction.

  • Some go behind the tree. Some come in front.

  • Some are broken. Some are long, some are short.

  • They're like people. Every one's different.

  • And that's what makes everyone wonderful,

  • it's the fact that we're different.

  • The fact that we're different.

  • There. Okay.

  • Couple more in here and there. Something like that.

  • A little more of the paint thinner, a little more color.

  • And maybe, we don't want this old big one left out.

  • Maybe he's got a big old arm that comes out here.

  • Like that. Like that.

  • Let your hand wiggle and jiggle when you're doing this.

  • Don't just make them all straight.

  • Nothing's more boring than just

  • perfectly straight tree limbs.

  • Give them some character.

  • There. There's another big old rascal.

  • If these are a type of evergreen,

  • evergreens seem to always have a lot of little

  • broken limbs on them.

  • That's where you always find

  • little squirrels and stuff sitting.

  • Speaking of squirrel, I really hope you've enjoyed

  • as many times as I've showed you Peapod,

  • my little squirrel in this series.

  • I really hope you've enjoyed seeing him.

  • It's my way of sharing nature with you,

  • and trying to make people aware that

  • these little creatures are so fantastic,

  • and they need our help and support

  • if they're to survive.

  • And you can really enjoy some of God's creations

  • by just looking out your window.

  • Because it's unreal, what's been done.

  • We have a tendency in our busy life

  • to forget about these little creatures

  • and to look over them.

  • And my young friends tell me that they

  • really like these little creatures.

  • But I hope, I really hope that you enjoy them,

  • because they're as I say, they're very

  • special to me.

  • Very special to me.

  • But, anyway, you know painters are sort of

  • weird, they like things like that.

  • All right.

  • You don't have to be a painter to like little creatures.

  • Just put a little grass down here, bottom of this.

  • Maybe we'll, just take it right on through there,

  • wherever.

  • A little yellow ochre, Indian yellow, cadmium,

  • sap green, just mix them on the brush.

  • Let all these little colors and things just happen.

  • There we go. Wherever.

  • Okay.

  • Put the least little touch of paint thinner on my brush.

  • I just dip the brush into a small, small amount of

  • paint thinner.

  • Just to thin the paint a little bit more.

  • So it really slips off very easy.

  • Now sometimes, it's fun.

  • It makes your painting look a little better.

  • Put some roots out here on the tree.

  • Just take a fan brush, a little black paint,

  • around, whatever.

  • When you put the indication here and there,

  • just a big old root that grows right out.

  • But, don't put one on every single tree,

  • because you're not gonna see every tree.

  • Some of them are gonna be covered up

  • by grass or things, little weeds that grow around here.

  • Don't put one on every one. Just here and there.

  • There. Something about like that.

  • Okay. We can go up in here, we just use that

  • same old brush to take a little.

  • And begin thinking about where all these

  • little pieces of foliage would live up in here.

  • Things like this.

  • Begin thinking about shape and form. There.

  • Okay.

  • If you have trouble making the paint stick,

  • add a little touch of the paint thinner to your brush.

  • Just a little. There.

  • See, here goes one right across the tree.

  • There.

  • This is really where the paint that you're

  • putting on top of all this on the tree.

  • Has to be thinner.

  • If it's not, it's just gonna all mix together,

  • and we don't want to do that.

  • We want it to stand out there and look good.

  • There. Wherever.

  • You put as many as you want in here.

  • I'm just gonna put a few here and there,

  • and let it go at that.

  • There we go.

  • Come on back down here at the bottom.

  • Driving the directory crazy here,

  • running back and forth on this.

  • All right. Little grassy areas.

  • Nice little place.

  • This would be just a fantastic place to come and walk.

  • Take your shoes off and let your feet run naked

  • through here.

  • Feels good on the bottom of your foot

  • when you run across all these little grassy areas.

  • All right.

  • Look at the amount of distance

  • that's already in there.

  • We have a big blank spot there, let's do something.

  • We got a minute left here. You know me.

  • Here we go. Another huge tree.

  • Another huge old tree we're putting right in there.

  • Right there.

  • Maybe he comes right down to about like that.

  • Give him a big old root hanging out there like that.

  • There he is.

  • I'm gonna get a little bit of bright red, white,

  • same thing.

  • Choom.

  • Let that drop right down, right there.

  • Something like that.

  • Okay. A little bit of our bluish color.

  • (mumbles) more in there.

  • Just drop that right on down.

  • There. A little bit of our black.

  • And once again, all we're gonna do here

  • is just sort of touch.

  • Like that. All right.

  • Let's drop a few little branches on that.

  • Don't want him left out. He needs some arms on him too.

  • There.

  • See, if we had known he was gonna be there,

  • we could have just put him in

  • while we were doing the other ones.

  • I just decided there should be something

  • over here in this spot too.

  • There we go.

  • Something like that.

  • Then we take our brush, once again,

  • let's just tap a few leaves on here.

  • It's a big tree, it ay not have many leaves down here.

  • They're way up somewhere, where

  • the little squirrel lives.

  • All right.

  • Okay.

  • Now this would be a, as I said,

  • a beautiful place to take a walk in the woods,

  • so let's have a little path.

  • We'll take a little dark sienna, a little bit of white,

  • go right up in here.

  • You just take a knife, and just rub.

  • It'll pick up the color underneath, and then

  • sort of all blend in together, and put you

  • in a happy little path.

  • Just rub very strongly.

  • Very strongly. There we go.

  • And that'll give us the indication of a little path,

  • that goes way back there in the distance.

  • And with that, I think we're gonna call this

  • old painting finished.

  • Once again, I really hope you've enjoyed this series.

  • The next one's already under production.

  • I look forward to seeing you then.

  • On behalf of the entire staff,

  • happy painting.

  • God bless, my friend.

  • (jazz music)

  • - [Voiceover] This program is brought to you by

  • North Light Books, publisher of over

  • 200 how-to books and videos for fine artists

  • and graphic designers, and by Langnickel,

  • manufacturers of selected artist brushes.

Hi, welcome back.

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