With the backdrop spine installed for the middle third
(“Valley Core”) of the layout, it
was time to apply the full sky effect.
Though the backdrop was primed with a light blue, the full sky effect
needed to blend from a deeper blue at the top of the backdrop to a near-white
haze layer near the horizon. I
reviewed backdrop painting techniques in print, video, and what I could
remember from live demonstrations (thanks MFK!). I am not a trained artist, but I understood the desired
blending effect. The best
technique—one even a “mechanical” person such as me could accomplish—was
provided by Pelle Soeborg in his “Mountain to Desert” soft cover book for
Kalmbach Publishing.
Pelle created six shades of blue by mixing varying amounts
of his sky blue color and white.
He then applied them as six color bands and blended each band to its
neighbors with a brush. This
technique is as close to “paint by numbers” as most of us will get for the
desired sky blending effect.
As the pictures illustrate, I found it best to start with
the top color band (my Band 6) and work down. I also found it best to work in sections of about six feet
length (arm length to arm length for me).
This kept the paint edge wet long enough to come back with the blending
brush. I also used a latex paint
extender to lengthen the drying time.
I used both 2” sash brushes and other 2” and 3” brushes for
blending. I’ll probably pay for
additional sash brushes for subsequent sky treatments. The sash brushes were that much better
to use.
I mixed six cans of paint ranging from my chosen sky color,
Sherwin Williams “Blissful Blue,” to an almost white using the white base as
the other color of the mix. I used
simple ratios: 6:0, 5:1, 4:2, 3:3, 2:4 and 1:5, blue to white. Though I obsessed about the sky blue
color for weeks, studying photos and the actual sky, in the end I selected a
compromise color, using Sherwin Williams paint (not a lot of blue cards in their
line) as the local store personnel were very helpful and knew their
product. I mixed the paint in quart
cans supplied by my paint dealer.
I labeled all of the paint gear with the paint ratios (paint
cans, mini-roller trays, mini-rollers) and the brushes used for the blending
(e.g. 2-3 for Bands 2 and 3). Clean up was a chore. Six cans of paint, six mini roller
pans, six rollers, six brushes.
The completed backdrop sky seen in the image below is fairly
well blended, though some color banding still appears. Addition of other backdrop details (terrain,
cities) and clouds will complete the blending. For now, I am very happy with the six-band sky treatment and
blend. It’s a good non-artist
technique.
Completed
backdrop sky in the Eugene Depot area.
Note that the post (with
thermostat mounted on it) blends into the backdrop even though the right side
of the post has a firm end with the backdrop inset on this side just beyond the
post.
The best thing I can say is that I've never particularly noticed the gradation of Bill's blue sky -- which is probably the effect he was going for.
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