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The Best of the Joy of Painting with Bob Ross
Stormy Seas
Season 33 Episode 3333 | 27m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Enjoy ‘Stormy Seas’ by television’s favorite painter Bob Ross.
Enjoy ‘Stormy Seas’ by television’s favorite painter Bob Ross. Such magnificent power in the sea and sky! Watch Bob as he tames this beautiful seascape painting.
Distributed nationally by American Public Television
The Best of the Joy of Painting with Bob Ross
Stormy Seas
Season 33 Episode 3333 | 27m 39sVideo has Closed Captions
Enjoy ‘Stormy Seas’ by television’s favorite painter Bob Ross. Such magnificent power in the sea and sky! Watch Bob as he tames this beautiful seascape painting.
How to Watch The Best of the Joy of Painting with Bob Ross
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship- Welcome back, certainly glad you could join me today.
It's a fantastic day here, and I hope it is wherever you are.
I thought today we'd do a beautiful little seascape and I'm going to show you a very simple way to make a very effective seascape so I tell you what, let's start out today and have them run all the colors across the screen that you need to paint along with me, and as usual they'll come across in the same order as I have them on the palette starting with the white and working around.
While they're doing that, come on up here and let me show you what I've done.
Today, we have our standard old size canvas up here.
The bottom part I have covered with black gesso.
Now, I know there is going to be a wave in here and I've left the eye of the wave open right in here, and the rest of it I just painted with black gesso.
The top I have just covered with liquid white as we normally do.
Down here, after the black gesso was good and dry, I've covered the center of it here with just Alizarin Crimson and the edges on each side with Alizarin Crimson and a little Phthalo Blue.
Then out here, put a little bit of VanDyke Brown and Dark Sienna mixture, that's all.
So we have brown on the outside, sort of a lavender, and then Alizarin Crimson in here.
I thought today, we'd do a beautiful little scene maybe that has like a little sunset and big clouds, I don't know, let's just have some fun and do it.
Let's be crazy, let's start out today with some cad yellow, little bit of Cadmium Yellow.
This is such a fantastic day.
It's bright and shiny today.
Let's make a painting that's the same way.
Let's take a little yellow and get brave today.
Just go right up here in the sky and just put a big ol' yellow mass right up in here.
Son of a gun, just be brave.
Then, without cleaning the brush, we'll go right back and grab Yellow Ochre, same way.
Just tap a little in the brush, it doesn't really matter how you load it.
Down here at the base of this, we'll put some Yellow Ochre.
It's a very nice golden color.
There we go.
Now then, still without cleaning the brush I'm going right into bright red.
Just once again, tap a little on the brush.
We'll blend it right into the base here.
There.
Those colors make you feel good already, they're just nice and bright and warm and cheery.
Makes you feel good.
Wash the brush, wash it off.
Shake off the excess (splashing and drumming) and just beat the devil out of it.
Now, then, I'm going to go into Titanium White with the corner of the brush only, just the corner then we'll go back up here, and right up here I want to be the brightest area in the sky so I'll put that corner of the brush right up here and blend it, just blend it outward.
There, then we just bring all this together.
That won't look really bright until we put some other things in the sky and then, I guarantee (whistles) it will just right out at us.
Okay, now, let's finish up the rest of the sky here.
We'll take a little blue, reach up in here and get some black so I have black and blue, or blue and black, whichever.
Now then, using little criss-cross strokes we'll just apply a little color up into the sky here.
There, just bring it right down to this but we don't want to touch it.
We'll blend in a second.
Just like so, a little bit over on the other side.
There.
Okay.
Once again, I'm going to wash the brush.
(splashing and banging) There we are, it's a good exercise in brush washing if nothing else.
Now with a good clean dry brush, we'll begin blending all of this together.
Just blend it together and that will soften it.
Smooth it, blend it.
(beating brush) I beat the brush only to remove excess paint as you pick up paint off the canvas, then you can just beat the brush a little bit and blend it right out, that way you don't have to go through the whole cleaning procedure.
There.
(beating brush) Give it another little knock and go right up here.
You can do that several times and that will keep your brush nice and clean and fresh.
Shoot, we've got a very nice sky already.
There.
Okay.
Now, let's get crazy today.
I'll tell you what, let's take Alizarin Crimson and a little bit of Phthalo Blue.
We're going to make a nice lavender color here but proportionally, you need much more crimson than blue.
That blue is very strong and it's difficult to tell what color that is so you take a little white, put it out here and then you can check it out and see if it's what you want.
Maybe we'll add a little more blue in there.
There we go.
Pick the paint totally up off the palette and turn it over.
Okay, let me clean my knife.
Now then, let's just use the old one inch brush today.
Load a little bit of paint on there, it's no big deal.
However you want to load it.
And maybe, maybe, maybe in our world there lives just a beautiful little cloud that floats around up here.
Now this lavender color you can mix with yellow without it turning green and of course the blue doesn't hurt it so it's a nice neutral color that you can use with both of these without getting in trouble.
There, maybe this comes right on around less and less pressure, you want to get softer.
There we go.
Go right on off the canvas.
Shoot, who knows, this is your world so you do anything that you want to do here.
I have a piece of just plain masking tape across here just to keep the horizon nice and straight.
I want the horizon to be very straight and that's the only reason it's there.
There we go.
And just wherever you want it.
Just sort of let your imagination go here.
Just make all kinds of happy little things.
There.
Maybe some little stringy things that live up here.
Okay.
(beating brush) Now, with a clean dry brush I'm just going to work this a little bit.
All this does is remove excess paint.
I want to highlight these clouds so the more paint that you can remove, the easier the next step will be.
There (banging brush).
Once again just knocking off excess paint.
Now then, let's begin blending this and working with it.
There we go.
Let's let all kinds of beautiful things happen here.
A lot of times, if you're out selling paintings and of course, we're not interested in making that happy buck but if you should be, if you're out selling paintings, a lot of times people buy paintings more for color than for content, and this is one of those rascals that will sell like hot cakes if you're interested in that.
The only reason I mention selling paintings to me, (banging brush) when you sell a painting and someone is worth, willing to buy something that you made with your hands and a scene that came out of your mind, selling is just sort of your report card.
It says you've done a good job.
Let's take some white.
Be right back.
Get a little touch of the bright red.
Just a little touch.
It's very strong.
It will set your whole world on fire in just a second.
Just a little bit.
Now then, let's go up here and just begin highlighting these clouds just right on top up here.
There we go, wherever you want them.
Just pretty little things going on.
Little tiny circles.
Bring some of it right around like that.
There and here.
Sort of let your imagination go.
There.
Okay.
Sort of follow the basic shapes that you have in your clouds here.
Let it wander around.
A little right in here.
There.
We don't know.
Clouds are very free.
They just float around the sky and have fun all day.
That's the way you should paint them, very loose, very free, happy little things.
Okay (banging brush) now we can come back with a good dry brush.
Use just the top corner and very, very gently, very gently blend this.
Tiny little circular strokes with just the top corner of the brush.
Tiny little strokes.
There, don't overwork it.
Don't overwork it.
There's almost a tendency to keep going.
It gets to where it's good, and you just keep going and going and going and pretty soon it's just all mushed together.
(banging brush) Knock off the excess paint again and very lightly begin blending this.
Just fluff it, lift it, work with it.
There.
Very lightly, we'll just blend the entire sky.
Three hairs and some air.
Okay.
This is a fantastic way of making a very effective sky, whether it's in a landscape or seascape, winter, summer.
Beautiful, and you can change the colors just to fit the season or your particular mood.
There, mean looking sky.
Okay (banging brush).
Let's have some fun now.
I'm going to take off the masking tape.
As I say, that was there only to preserve this nice straight water line.
We already have color up there.
So let's take a fan brush today.
We'll go right into a little bit of Titanium White and just load some color onto the bristles.
Both sides, just back and forth.
Now then... Let's come back to this horizon and very gently- When you do this, let me exaggerate, by making strokes like this and I'm really exaggerating now.
And those little strokes, little rocking type strokes like that, help create that illusion of waves that are far, far away.
Leave some dark areas in there.
We have to make a decision.
Maybe there's sort of a large wave right here.
So we come in here, go loop, loop, like that.
That's all there is to it.
Doesn't look much like a wave yet, but it will.
There we are.
Okay, now you can take a clean, dry fan brush and all you're worried about is the dark area right in here, watch what happens.
Grab this, and begin blending the color back.
Just begin blending it back.
Angles are very important here.
See what happens?
Now, then... And that easy, it begins creating that illusion of water moving back there, and we'll come back and highlight those and really make them stand out.
Now then, now then, somewhere in here, we're going to have a big crasher so we have to start making some decisions.
Let's go right up in here and apply some color.
This is just basically white, least little touch of yellow in it.
There.
Just let it work right on out.
Wherever you want it to go.
Now then, we take a large brush, be sure it is clean and very dry.
Just barely touching, barely touching, just sort of wind it up.
The bristles are not moving much.
It just blends everything together very softly.
There.
Just let it work right on out.
That color that you have on the canvas, the crimsons and the lavenders, and all those beautiful colors begin working their way through.
There we are.
We don't want this wave to get too big.
We want it to stay quite small.
Okay, now then, take a little white.
Come right along this edge.
Take our large brush and once again just blend it back.
That blending back makes that little trough in between waves a little light area.
See how that pushed that wave right back?
Okay.
Shoot, we're having some fun.
Now then, back into our white.
Load a lot of color onto the bristles, least little touch of yellow into that, least little touch.
And then we have to make some big decisions here.
Where is our wave crashing over?
Maybe (whistle).
Gotta make those little noises.
There it comes, there it comes.
Just a little bit.
There.
'kay?
Just let that color just zing right over there.
You begin forming the wave there.
Now, from that angle it probably wont look just right.
When it comes straight on, you'll see the difference though.
Let's take our old number three fan brush and take a little bit of lavender color, mix a little white with it.
This is Alizarin Crimson, Phthalo Blue.
I've got the number three fan brush and we're going to have some foam splashing up in here and all we do is take the corner of the brush and just churn it, wiggle it.
There it comes.
Start working on basic shapes.
Come right on up and right on up.
See there?
Isn't that fantastic?
This is the most fun to do in a seascape, this particular part, and all we're doing is putting the shadows on right now, the dark part, the splash, then we'll come back and put the light areas in.
Sometimes it's so much fun you want to put the light areas in immediately, and then it's difficult to put this part in.
Put the shadows on first, and then work on the goodies.
Okay.
Let's go right into Titanium White.
Going to load some color right on.
This is still the number three fan brush.
Okay, now then, let's begin putting in some beautiful little splashes.
Push upward with that brush.
The foam patterns, splashing patterns here are created on that upward stroke.
We just let them come right on around here.
There.
See how you let that just crash?
Just think about water splashing and crashing.
That's beginning to mix with that dark shadow color we put in there and it gets darker and darker back here.
This will happen automatically for you.
You don't have to worry about it.
Let the canvas work, the paint, the colors.
There we go.
Now sometimes, I live in Florida and in Florida we don't have big rocks and stuff.
Sometimes you just want to make little tiny simple seascapes and all you have to do is just touch the top of the wave like that and it creates those little waves, see there, just touch.
So if you want to do a Florida seascape, that's all it amounts to.
You can pull a little bit of that color down.
A very simple way to make a nice little seascape and that's all it takes.
But, I thought today we'd do one that's a little more fun.
Now then... With the corner of the two inch brush, we want to just blend this gently, gently.
Two hairs and some air.
Barely caressing the canvas.
Just touch that, let it blend together.
There.
Now maybe, maybe the light shining through here.
Maybe we have a big reflection coming on down.
So let's just do something like this.
Just pull a little color straight down.
Grab ol' big brush.
Like so.
See, it mixes with all those colors that are on there and all those beautiful things just happen.
Very lightly go across.
Doesn't look like much right now but as we begin working on that, it will look like a shimmer in there and just beautiful things.
Now maybe there's a little wave, oh there it is!
You knew it was there.
Right there in the front.
And, once again, we'll blend it back.
Just blend it back.
The strokes and the angles are very important here.
That little rocking.
Just blend it right up in there.
Darker, darker, darker over here.
Okay, now then, shoot let's get crazy.
Let's take a little white and mix the least little touch of Phthalo Blue with it.
Just the least little touch.
I just want it to have sort of a blue cast.
Now, then, let's take the small knife.
Let's go in here, and we'll have to start making some determinations.
Little roll of paint on the small knife.
Maybe, get in here, maybe there's a little a little watery thing that comes right in here and push very hard, very hard.
Just allow that to come right across.
You're putting a little ridge of paint right out here.
Alright, now we can take a clean fan brush and very gently grab this and begin blending it back.
Just grab it and blend it back.
There.
Think about angles and what's happening in this.
Don't just pull it back at angle, it needs to be flat to make that water lay down.
And here and there, maybe there's some.
There we are, just nice little things happening but this is where you make the water move up and down and however you want it to do.
These little things in here.
And, I'll tell you what, maybe back in here we have some big rocks.
You know me, I like these big rocks in seascapes.
To me, it makes it more interesting.
But, you don't have to have them in yours.
I'm just going to take some brown.
Just plain old Van Dyke Brown with Dark Sienna in it, a little lavender here and there too, what the heck, whatever dark color you happen to have.
Let's just fill that in.
Even this rock, I had painted the basic shape in with the black gesso.
There.
I'll tell you what, maybe, maybe, maybe maybe there's another rock.
Yeah, there we are, it lives right there.
Just a nice little rock, a friendly little rock.
Maybe over on the other side here, let's have a rock over here.
We don't want this side left out.
Same color, and all we're doing here is just applying a very basic shape, just blocking in color.
This probably won't hardly even show at this point.
I'm going to add a little black in this one just to darken it up even more.
I want this side to be very dark so add a little black right down here in the corner.
Maybe we'll put a bump up here on this rock.
Whatever you want.
Any way that you want it.
Now, that color will allow us to paint other colors over it and beautiful things happen.
Maybe we'll have a little beach up here so I'll take a little white and let's just go up in here and because we put brown on the canvas instantly, we have land.
There we go.
Just like so.
Now, if you want to show reflections under here, see you can just grab the edges of this and pull down, and go across and that will make it look wet just like that.
Now, then, let's take, we'll take some white.
Put some white on here.
Grab a little bit of the lavender color.
And, maybe I'll add a touch more crimson to it.
Oh, that's nice.
Just load some on the fan brush.
Now then, let's begin shaping these rocks here.
You can do this with a liner brush.
Take your time and put all kinds of things in.
Sort of hard to do in the timeframe that we have here but at home, you do it whichever way works best.
There we go.
See.
But this is how you can literally shape and form all kinds of things happening in your rocks.
You can just tap it.
Just an indication.
All you're looking for is the highlights in the rocks.
There.
Okay, some out here and wherever you want them, wherever, wherever.
There's another thing that's happening right about there.
See how easy those are?
Now then, we'll take a large brush and very gently, follow the angles.
Just caress it just enough to move the paint a little.
Don't want to destroy all those little lines and marks that you put in there.
Just enough to move it.
Look at all the different planes in there.
Okay, let's go over to the other one and do the same basic thing.
Over in here, since our light source is in the center, there we are.
Here comes another one.
Just sort of look at it and decide where you think all these little things live and play.
There.
There we are.
Make all types of shapes here.
Maybe there's another one.
Yeah, there it is.
See, right on down.
Just like so, wherever you want.
There is one.
Everybody is going to have different kinds of rocks in their paintings, so don't worry about it if they don't look just like these, or just like ones that somebody else's done.
We'll take our large brush and once again very lightly, just enough to distort a little bit.
It's sort of like when we do reflections.
We don't want to get carried away.
Just enough to move it.
There, maybe- shoot, let's get crazy here.
Going to take the little knife, I'll go right back into that blue.
Maybe there's another little ripple that lives right here.
There it is.
There it is, just lay it in and very lightly blend it back just like before.
There.
Now then, with the liner brush and a little paint thinner, let's go back in here and I want to firm up this edge so it stands apart.
Just gently blend it on in, just to make it stand out.
Put some little lines in here indicating little foamy things that are happening.
This is what shapes your wave.
Paint should be very thin and it will literally flow.
See, even back in here, you want all kinds of little watery movements.
There.
These little details, this is what really makes your seascape special.
Come right along here.
There we are.
There, just all kinds of little things, see them?
Right around, right around go slow, there's some.
That easy.
And, under this thing here, little dark line will help set that off, make it really stand out.
And at home when you're doing this, spend some time with it.
Just put all kinds of little details in here.
You'll be absolutely amazed at what an effective and beautiful seascape you can make in just a matter of minutes.
The old clock on the wall tells me it's about time to shut it down for the day.
I hope you've enjoyed this.
It will really give you a nice little thing to do.
It's beautiful colors.
It will make you happy in here.
So from all of us here, I'd like to wish you happy painting, and God bless.
(theme music plays)
Distributed nationally by American Public Television