I was pretty pleased with that underpainting. There were plenty of textures there and it was already looking like a landscape. Those black trees had pretty well disappeared, which I was secretly happy with. The plan was that on day two, I just needed to harden some foreground horizon edges and add some interest in the form of trees, people, animals or buildings. With a tree probably covering up that vertical black line on the right.
So I hardened my horizon, added a couple of trees and added a wolf or dog. To do this I mainly used sap green, French ultramarine, Winsor orange and permanent rose, although I did start with some olive green bits in places. I kept the Greenland-shaped watermark in the middle at the bottom, turning it into whatever you'd call a golf bunker away from the golf course. In glazing over the foreground, I tried to put in interesting gradations and to stick with the red and green areas while adding blue, yellow and a neutral grey in places to liven it up.
And then I looked at the painting. Something still wasn't right. The masked spatters were looking like falling snow and the scene was feeling cold, so I thought I'd add some snow. There's no way a pan of (semi-transparent) Chinese white was going to do the trick, so I went for (opaque) titanium white. I used it straight from the tube to maximise opacity. At first just added it to tree branches and to high spots. It took a couple of applications to work as the first dried to a grey. And then I experimented in two ways. The first way was to use a wet rigger brush to drag the pure white highlights downwards. This created some great grey snow. The second was the dry brush technique, where I loaded up with undiluted white paint and dragged the brush sideways along the paper, so it only touched the peaks of the rough paper surface. That also worked well.
I'm pretty happy with it. Now that it's dried, I can see that the horizons on the left are a bit too white, with the white graduating too abruptly into the green underneath, as if the horizon's been drawn on with a thick white pen. Otherwise OK though and would look good on anybody's wall. It was sold to an Edinburgh-based entrepreneur.
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