Blotting

Always Carry a Paper Towel

One of the lines from Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy that my husband and I love is “Always Carry a Towel.” We discuss this at length to the point where he actually packs a towel for any of our adventures because we never know when we will need one. It actually comes in handy with the dog and any water source quite often! Speaking of water and needing a quick way to clean things up; I usually use a paper towel when blotting watercolor paint. I use a regular reusable rag when working with acrylics. The fine details and intricate lines I create with watercolor require a gentle hand with the aid of a small surface area especially with my 4″ x 6″ Originals. Paper towels are easy to fold into tiny spaces in order to collect excess water or fix runaway paint.

The joy of watercolor is to let the paint flow and interact with each color differently. In my large pieces I do need some control to keep my fine lines from trickling into nothingness. So I suggest always carrying a paper towel and yes, I reuse them. One paper towel will last me about 2 to 3 months if my dog does not get a hold of it and chew it up. I have to hide these beauties as if they were buried treasure he cannot sniff out. Keeping these paper towels safe for multiple months can be a challenge but I love reusing them so it is necessary. Blotting is super important in my technique so the paper does not buckle. I work in a wet on dry technique and control the minute wet on wet interactions specifically. Some of my recent work was wet on wet with a wet on dry technique to complete it and it was very enjoyable. The Daisy Way series was fascinating and fun to create. I used a paper towel with both styles and prefer the wet on dry for my larger works.

The wet on dry allows me to work for several hours, days, months on a piece. I can let it sit, focus on the lines, and challenge myself with determination to finish these. Each large painting takes many layers and many hours of work. Dolphin Smiles was painted using a wet on dry technique. My gallery focuses on the natural world and includes portraits interacting with nature. Recently I have been working in my sketchbook and posting videos on social media platforms. Each video, if you focus, you can see me use a paper towel to blot a section of the painting. These timelapse videos move quicker than I could ever paint in real life so you have to watch very closely to see a paper towel on one of these “reels.” Please drop a comment on what you use to blot your surface area, excess water problems, etc. If you have any questions, feel free to leave a comment and I will respond in 24-48 hours Monday-Friday. You can also send me a private message at khilliardart.com/contact

Thank you for reading and have a wonderful Wednesday!

-Karen Hilliard

2 replies on “Blotting”

I absolutely love this post (As well as all your others by the way. I eagerly wait for each one❤️). Explaining and showing the comparison between both techniques for me is breathtaking. Both technical skill and dream state mixed together to showcase glimpses of two worlds of beauty.

I am so very envious of your imagination and skill. You are an inspiration to us artists. 🥰🥰🥰

I myself (when working with watercolor) always used either toilet paper rolled to a point for fine bleed control, or a rough torn single layer edge of watercolor paper to soak up wonky pond settles (when I got to ambitious with my brush weight). For blotting I tended to use an old cotton shirt. In hindsite, using a paper towel would have covered my bases for all three. Making things so much easier. I tip my chapeau to thee. 🫶

Truly sound advice to always carry a paper towel. Btw, LOVE HITCHHIKERS GUIDE TO THE GALAXY!❣️❣️❣️❣️ A paper towel “…is about the most massively useful thing…” and, I just so happen to have a toothbrush as well. 🤪

Danu,
Thank you so much for your wonderful comment! I went to your website and I am truly inspired by your imagination and skill as well. You are the inspiration you speak of and thank you for writing that I inspire you. This means a lot to me.
It is good that you have a toothbrush as well!! HAHA

I am grateful to you for reading my blogs Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and look forward to sharing my art journey with you. Keep making beautiful art and see you on the internet later this week!
-Karen

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