29 April, 2008

How I paint ghosts with acrylics

First......I use acrylic paint that has a lot of water in it. This allows it to "spread out and dry smooth with no texture.

Second.....a) The background is very important. I like to put down a lot of layers for the background part of the picture.....for example if I have a building in the background that is red. Ill paint it red once...they paint it over with 3 or 4 more layers of different tones of red. Why....well the background has to has to have some thickness (of paint) to create contrast with the ghost that you will paint over top pop out.

b) Put in a medium amount of black into the background... c) Paint the background items very distinctly.

Third..........a) The ghost itself. I draw the ghost overtop of the background with pencil. Use a hard pencil.....I use a #3 so as to get as little lead on the painting. And dont smear the lead with your hands as you paint....and if too much lead gets on the painting, remove it by dabbing masking tape on the canvas. Further, to prevent smearing you can cover parts of the ghost that you are not working on with a piece of paper. b) Now you outline the parts of the ghost figure very lightly with the dominate color of of each part of the ghost....for example, blue for the hat, flesh color for the face, black for the shoes, etc. Do it very lightly with a lot of water in the paint.....and don worry if you miss or just choose to leave out some lines....after all it is a ghost and every line does not need to be defined....you choose which parts of the ghost you want to emphasize.....not me....lol...

c) Now you are ready for some what I call, "smear technique"....you paint over the lines you just painted paint that has a lot of water in it....but quick before it dries....you smear the paint with your finger from the out outside of the figure toward the center of the figure. Do each part of the ghost figure in turn. Do each color in turn. This is how I shade the ghost figure. You could also do this with a brush instead of a finger.

d) Wait for the paint to dry. Erase the pencil lines from your ghost figure....and voila....there is your ghost.

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8 Comments

Barbara Giordano 02 May 2008

That is so cool and good information. Thank you!

WESTERN ARTWORK By Denny Karchner 03 May 2008

This is good stuff David! As much as I hate to say it, more people would probably see this in the "Art Discussion" board.

Thanks for posting. --Denny

Johnnie Belinda Ramey 07 May 2008

I really like the info on how to make ghosts images. Being a psychic that is my favorite subject. Johnnie belinda

Ann 24 Jul 2009

David, I had a look through your portfolio and it's excellent. I think your paintings are fabulous with the "ghost" figures. Since I do mainly nature paintings, I really enjoyed the wolf in winter. Thanks so much for the interesting tutorial. I always wondered how artists created the ghostly images into their paintings. I'll have to give this a try some time. Ann

L.E. Van der Vlerk-van de 25 Jul 2009

Thank you for the tutorial. Question. When you smear. do you that inch by inch or? Acrilic dryes so quick. I thinh I made some mistakes in my writing. So i am sorry. English is not my daily language. Greetings L.E.

Vicki Daniel 29 Jul 2009

Thanks for the tip!

Skyler Tipton 01 Aug 2013

I have some 'ghostly' pumpkins I am working on. Thank you :)

chris cooper 09 Apr 2014

Great technique. I have a use for it for a picture I'm painting for a cousin. Thanks again.

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