Thursday, February 20, 2014
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Winterlude Part 3
Friday, January 25, 2013
Winterlude Part Two
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Winterlude
I thought I would do a demo of how I paint this Christmas image for licensing. I do a fair amount of illustrative art for licensing through Porterfield's Fine Art Licensing. A winter scene is the perfect choice, since the art that is most in demand for licensing is usually a Christmas theme. These images are often used for greeting cards, puzzles, gift ware and paper products as well as many other possibilites. A prospective client will review the work I have available for licensing in a given catagory, choose what suits their project and purchase limited rights to use the image for a specific purpose and for a specific period of time.
The first thing I do when producing this type of art is to brainstorm an idea that will appeal to a maximum number of buyers. Quite often, as in this case, the idea includes a number of similar images that may evolve into a series of finished pieces, all on the same theme. Once I feel I have enough inspiration to proceed I come up with reference material for my idea. I file all types of reference and I take digital photos everywhere I go, so I have a lot of material to draw from. Now I create sketches to work out my design and create any additional parts of my picture from a combination of memory and imagination. When this is done I proceed to do a finished sketch on board or canvas to begin my painting.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Tropical Rain Forest Toucan - Step Four
I continue to paint layers of detail into the leaves until they seem to be strong enough to stand out without overpowering the toucan in the foreground. The last thing required is to intensify some of the colours in the toucan, mango, butterfly and tree frog. The picture is complete when I ad strong white highlights here and there. I save the greatest colour contrast and largest white highlight for the toucan and it's bill, so that it will dominate the picture, both in size and strength.
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Tropical Rain Forest Toucan - Step Three
Next, I wash in thin layers of acrylic paint over the mango in the toucan's beak. I am starting to suggest the grainy surface of the skin and the subtle changes in colour from red to lime green to golden yellow. The complex pattern of the butterfly is laid in with flat colour before I begin modelling the leafy foliage and flowers in the middle ground. The tree frog requires careful attention in order to keep it from becoming lost against the green frond on which it sits.
Sunday, August 21, 2011
Tropical Rain Forest Toucan - Step Two
I start to add colour to the Toucan. There is a subtle pattern in the heavy bill and I wash this in with a mixture of red and burnt sienna. A bit of blue establishes the local colour around the eye. A very light, warm wash of acrylic gives the white 'bib' on the bird's throat some form.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Tropical Rain Forest Toucan - Step One
I then used a kneaded eraser to remove most of the pencil from the illustration board, leaving only faint lines to guide me. Next, I painted in the black areas using acrylic paint.
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Arctic Summer
The Arctic wolf lives in a tough environment, above the treeline. Summers are very short there, and the tundra bursts into bloom for only a matter of weeks before temperatures begin to drop once more. These pups are enjoying the mid-day sunshine while the mother wolf keeps a watchful eye on them. There is little cover for them, should a predator happen by.
I painted this picture on stretched canvas using alkyd paints. The painting measures 16 inches high by 22 inches wide. I used a circular composition to direct the viewer's eye from the pup in the foreground, up to it's mates, and then to the mountain peak in the background before flowing to the she-wolf and back to the pups again. The colour scheme is warm, which fortifies the feeling of mid-day sunshine.
You can find this painting and archival quality prints on paper or canvas at my web site www.richarddewolfe.com or my publisher's web site http://fineartamerica.com/profiles/richard-de-wolfe.html
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Weather's Changing

I don't paint much wildlife anymore, but at one time, the genre represented a large percentage of the paintings that I produced. When I was a child, birds were my passion, especially the ducks and geese that frequented the Thousand Islands region. I learned much about drawing and painting by observing them and then trying to capture their likenesses on paper or canvas.
The Lesser Scaup or ‘Blue Bill’, as many locals know it, is a diving duck that will feed and rest in the thousands along the lower Great Lakes and St. Lawrence River districts during the migration south each autumn. They nest in the Arctic but they will spend the winter anywhere from the US/Canadian border to as far south as Central America.
This painting shows both male (purple/black heads) and female (brown heads) of the species, on a beautiful autumn day, but ominous clouds are building, suggesting a change in the weather is coming.
This painting measures 16 inches by 20 inches and it is painted in alkyd on stretched canvas.