tulip drawing with a loose watercolor blend technique
Blog,  Watercolor and Ink

Tulip Drawing with a Loose Watercolor Blend Technique

Tulip drawing. Who can resist tulips? Or flowers in general?

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When the weather turns warm, I open the windows, cut and display whatever flowers bloom and let the outside in. When I stop to paint, the same thing happens, the outside comes inside in the form of flowers. I gravitate to painting them just like the weather gravitates to warmth.

Today, I want to share with you another way to use one of those Watercolor Techniques we learned about several posts ago. I called it the multi-colored splot technique. It’s very wet, allows for blooming (some people avoid blooming with watercolors, but I love it), and it can add a lovely looseness to your painting if given a little direction. Of course, I’m combining it with a little dip pen tulip drawing. Really, you can use any pen, but I like the effect created by contrasting thick and thin ink strokes.

Let’s get started.

What you need:

Steps:

First, dip your brush in plain water, and use it to paint a loose tulip shape on your watercolor paper.

painting with water, tulip drawing with loose watercolor, dip pen drawing
Can you see the tulip form in water on the paper?

Next, mix a little bit of pink paint with a little bit of orange paint until you have a coral color. You may need to test this on a separate piece of paper to check your color. Then, take a little color with the tip of your brush and add it to the water tulip petals. If you load your brush, you will end up with too much color. For this project, a translucent color will work best.

Add paint to water, watercolor tutorial, loose watercolor
Dab the paint around in the water where you want the coral color.

Add a touch of red paint to the tips to darken them.

red paint, darken the edges, loose watercolor, watercolor tutorial
Add a hint of red to the edges to darken those areas.

Take up a little green paint on the tip of your brush and touch it to the stem and leaf of the water tulip.

Green stem, loose watercolor, watercolor tulip tutorial
Add green to the wet stem of the tulip.

As you can see, the color moves quickly down the stem and can become muddy where the colors mix. If you see this happening, take a paper towel and dab it lightly to the spot where they meet. It will pick up enough of the color to prevent too much blending. It’s okay if they mix a little, it adds to the loose look, but we don’t want the whole stem to turn brown as the pink and green mix.

blend watercolor technique, loose watercolor, tulip tutorial
Dab at the water/paint with a paper towel if it starts getting too muddy where it blends.

When it’s dry, add a loose tulip drawing on top of the watercolor, but try not to line up the edges of the ink with the edges of the watercolor.

tulip drawing, dip pen drawing, loose watercolor, tutorial, watercolor flower, flower illustration
Add a tulip drawing for extra appeal.

C’est Fini!

Stand back and enjoy your work! Try it again, and choose your own colors to blend. What else can you use this watercolor blend technique to paint?

I’d love to see your results. Please share them on Instagram and tag me @the.paintedpen so I know where to find them!

I hope this tutorial brightened your day!

Happy creating!

Joanne, Your Style in Letters - Name

Just a brainy creative with a fascination about how people think and understand. I use watercolor and letter design to encourage connection ... with self, the environment, and especially the people who live there.