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Anna Finkel Anna Finkel
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A Face-Painted Ally

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Lauren Purnell Lauren Purnell
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Christmas Tree Shopping

I did this piece for Christmas. I got some Princeton brushes as a gift, so I figured I’d make a painting (Princeton brushes are awesome, by the way. If you can afford them, buy them). I hope you enjoy, and I will try and post often.

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Grey Grey
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Door with climbers

In my this artwork I have shown a tree with flowers on it describing it as that nature seems beautiful with simplicity.

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Amélya Bernard Amélya Bernard
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Baignade intrépide

This is a watercolor painting I made last summer while camping with a scout group.

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Valkea Valkea
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Beauty is in the Eye of the Beholder

Mixed media: markers, watercolour pencils, acrylic. This is an old doodle from ca. 2003, which I came across while moving houses. I added a bit of colour today and few lines...

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Valkea Valkea
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Stockbridge, by the Water of Leith

Water soluble pencils on A4. I did this as a part of Urban Sketching meetup in the spring. Drawn on location in about an hour.

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Mark B. Hill Mark B. Hill
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Teapot

Pen, Ink and Watercolor in my sketchbook

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Amélya Bernard Amélya Bernard
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Chalet Éclaireur - Scout cottage

watercolor painting I made from observation last summer in a scout camp.

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Indiandoodler Indiandoodler
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The London eye

The London eye is one of my fascinations and an icon.

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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Fa La La

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abbi satterthwaite abbi satterthwaite
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Rocks under water

Computer art. Picture taken from phone.

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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Casual Claus

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Amélya Bernard Amélya Bernard
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The Olive tree

Here is a watercolor piece I made so I can relax, have fun with textures and my gold ink. It is meant to illustrate how those olive tree leaves shimer in the light of day.

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omar sayed darwesh omar sayed darwesh
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Posing

An ink colors sketch for a different angle pose

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Jenny Mccarthy Jenny Mccarthy
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Buy Acrylic Portrait Canvas Paintings Online

IndianArtZone is the best Online Store to buy Portrait Paintings. Choose your favorite portrait painting from a master portrait artist in oil, watercolor, charcoal, or other mediums visit today https://www.indianartzone.com/figurative-portraits-human-paintings-canvas-paintings-artworks

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Mattia Mattia
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Rabbits postcards

A cute postcard for a gift.Watercolored by my wife!

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David Meehan David Meehan
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Romeo and Juliet

This design is from a series used for postcards, A4 prints, bags, tshirts etc https://davidmeehanart.blogspot.com/p/y.html

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David Meehan David Meehan
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Wake me up when its over

Pen and splash of watercolor from a series of postcards I sell https://davidmeehanart.blogspot.com/p/y.html

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Indi Edwards Indi Edwards
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Detached

This watercolour painting was inspired by another artists brilliant work (I'm afraid I don't know the name). Absolutely loved doing this piece. My mother asks why I always do sad paintings and thinks I should do more happy ones. What do you think? Comment Below

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Kevin Loftus Kevin Loftus
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The blue doorway.

Nobody should ever listen to the voices coming from the blue doorway.

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Steve Moore Steve Moore
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Orval Overall (real name)

Lamy Safari, Noodler's Bulletproof, watercolor on 5"x7" watercolor paper.

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Arwen Arwen
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Monster Mug

The first stage of clay is slip. Slip is watery clay; it is most often used to "slip and score", which I used to attach the features of the mug to the mug itself. The second stage of clay is wet. Wet is moist, very plastic clay. Wet is the type of clay I love to use, just because it feels so fresh, and because it is moist enough that I don't have to soften it with water. The third stage of clay is leather hard. Leather hard is the stage my mug was in after being left on the shelf for twenty-four hours or so. It is easier to cut but very difficult to sculpt. The fourth stage of clay is greenware. Greenware is completely dry clay that is fragile and breakable. I would say that greenware is an overdose of leather hard for the clay. In other words, leaving clay out for a longer amount of time can turn leather hard clay into greenware. The fifth stage of clay is bisque. This is the clay after its first firing. If it was grey clay, it is now white in this stage. It is now completely hard and no longer soft in any way. Bisque, luckily, is only one stage away from glaze... The sixth stage of clay is glaze. This is the final firing and results in a smooth texture and a shiny look. I loved the way my glaze came out. While I was painting the mug, it was more of a ruddy red-brown but when it glazed, it turned out to be this beautiful spotted green.

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Valkea Valkea
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Mr Horner

Watercolour pencils and white acrylic on A4. Drawn from the bust at the National Portrait Gallery in Edinburgh.

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Valkea Valkea
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Mini

Watercolour pencils and gouache on A4. I did this today at a Urban Sketchers meet up in the National Museum of Scotland - although, I guess, strictly speaking it does not fulfil the urban sketching requirements :D

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David Terrill David Terrill
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RIP CRV

Airbags deployed...RIP CRV 2003-2019. Drove this guy just short of 17 years. First new car I owned. Goodbye old friend.

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Kevin Loftus Kevin Loftus
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Sea cliffs in gouache

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Anne Keenan Higgins Anne Keenan Higgins
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December

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Jami Lea Jami Lea
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Watercolor Frenchies

Commissioned watercolor frenchie pups!

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Steve Steve
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Shoes

This is a watercolor painting of a couple of "shoes" that loves to dance.

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Stephen Stephen
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In the Beginning There Were Three

I painted this illustration to publicly proclaim the biblical account of a six (literal) days creation by the Holy Trinity to be the true account of the origin of all things that have been, are now, and will exist. I believe the evolution theories have many holes in them and lack sound evidence to declare evolution as the true account of the origin of all matter. I believe schools should teach both theories, and let the student decide which is truth for themselves. The three figures of light that are holding the hourglass represent the Trinity—the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit—Who together created all things. The background of the painting is supposed to illustrate that the Trinity created all things from nothing. The hourglass is supposed to appear to be made of pure gold, representing a creation without corruption and decay, which would later be part of the curse the creation would be subjected to because of man’s sin. The top and bottom bases of the hourglass have the icon of the moon and sun six times to represent the six days of creation. The six spheres floating inside the hourglass represent the six (literal) days and what was created on each day. The first day, God separated the darkness from the light. This sphere is placed at the bottom of the hourglass because sand in an hourglass always flows down. The second day, God separated the sky from the sea. This is represented in the sphere located at the bottom right of the hourglass. The third day, God separated the land from the waters, represented in the top half of the sphere. The bottom part represents the plant life that was created on the same day. The fourth day, God created outer space: every star and planet. God mentions the sun was created to light the earth by day and the moon to light the earth by night. This is represented in the sphere located at the top middle of the hourglass. 1514 The fifth day, God created the creatures of the air and the creatures of the water. This is represented in the sphere located in the top right of the hourglass. The sixth day, God created both the land creatures and man. This sphere is located in the top left of the hourglass. (October 28, 2017)

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