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gorneaux OP t1_jad35h6 wrote

Also black ink and a bit of gouache and acrylic, 22"x30"

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Formal-Department-10 t1_jad5697 wrote

When I first scrolled past I thought this was a photograph! I love the strong red color- really well done!

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timmayay t1_jadclvh wrote

Really lovely! I hope my watercolors can get to this point. I love painting the SF architecture.

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TheDeadlySquid t1_jadezo1 wrote

Great painting, brings back some memories of the area. I couldn’t help myself and look, but the house is actually white, but I like that you made it red. The owners should do that IRL.

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Freffo t1_jadjsb8 wrote

This is really good! The red accent of the house is incredible, great composition overall. Just wow!

A dumb question about the red color, can watercolor be that saturated? I am not giving any critique about my question, just very curious. I want to pick up and paint with watercolor one day too.

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FIFTHSUN2012 t1_jadlmhj wrote

Grew up in the Sunset. I recognized that house right off the bat.

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Wayne1946 t1_jadscrb wrote

Outdid E. Hopper. with this one.

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gorneaux OP t1_jadwdg9 wrote

Thanks so much! Getting all that red on, I'm realizing, took as much time as the rest of the painting.

As I was mentioning over in r/watercolor, my watercolor kit was like I can give you the power, Jim, but I don't know how long it'll last!

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gorneaux OP t1_jadwof4 wrote

Pshaw! I don't think the ghost of old Edward is terribly worried about his reputation...but I thank you very much for that generous comment 🙏😊

[EDIT: Typo fixed]

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gorneaux OP t1_jadxeqf wrote

Someone in an SF group on another platform dug up a 2015 picture, reminding me how it used to be a pale faded blue. Totally different vibe. My friend Thorsten, shortly after he moved in, decided it needed a bit of pop. He said the house painter kept asking, "Are you sure??"

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TommyTuttle t1_jadymko wrote

Hell to the yeah, that is a great looking house right there

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Wayne1946 t1_jadz4w0 wrote

I am closing in on my end game so if l meet up with him in whatever realm we find ourselves in then l will surely inform him.

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gorneaux OP t1_jae0bns wrote

It's the best! Well maybe not the best, but it's good for us artists.

Speaking of which, do you ever attend SF Sketchers meetups? I'm the organizer for the Sunset Sketchers...we are sort of a subset group, meeting on the west side. Msg me for more info of you want.

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gorneaux OP t1_jae0qfe wrote

Must be an old photo you saw on Google street view or somewhere else. Friend of mine has owned this place for the last few years, and had it painted this intense color shortly before the pandemic. The house painter kept asking if he was sure, over and over again.

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habitoti t1_jae25d5 wrote

Absolutely awesome, had to look twice to check if it‘s photo. But then, the shadows of the various poles are revealing, as this is not how they would be created in daylight.

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gorneaux OP t1_jae2kya wrote

Really, thank you so much!

Thanks for asking, and specifically about the paint.

The red of the full house is, if anything more intense than this. So especially as the Sennelier paints I like to use are not real saturated like, by contrast, Daniel Smith or Winsor & Newton, I was wondering how I was going to pull it off.

Did a lot of tests before I came up with a plan of a base layer of French vermilion, a really hot, orangey red -- which ended up being several base layers, one on top of the other, to make it seem strong enough. Then I laid a glaze of alizarin crimson over it to make it a bit darker, take some of the heat off.

I liked where that was going, and kept doing it, layer after alternating layer, really for days, until it just didn't seem to be getting any redder. So I call it Terminal Red.

That's a very inside baseball walkthrough of this piece. Normally, I like stuff that's low saturation and colors that are pretty dialed back, which tends to be how we roll out here in the foggy Sunset District by the ocean...anx in general a more, uh, watercolory look. Now if you like more saturated, intense colors, I'd point you towards the brands I mentioned above, or M Graham, which is another set I use: beautiful paints, a good value, and honey-based so they don't dry out.

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gorneaux OP t1_jae3fx2 wrote

Thanks so very much!!

Yeah, someone else pointed out that the shadows don't quite match up, but, heck, I'm happy with that. I for sure worked from a photo -- wasn't about to sit in the middle of the intersection for three weeks with a 22x30 piece of cold-pressed paper, not in this rain and graupel. But it was looking a bit too much like a CAD architectural rendering. I like that shadow wonkiness. 😂

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uriahjaylee t1_jae6l7c wrote

Beautiful painting!! I love the Outer Sunset representation! I actually live just a few blocks away from this house.

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gorneaux OP t1_jae7qnu wrote

Nice! WYKYK. I had never lived in or even BEEN to the outers, or even the Central Sunset, despite having grown up in SF. Then in 2015 or 16 I had to move out of the Mission (master tenant moved his GF in) and I landed on 48th and Pacheco. Fell in love with it right away.

I've since moved to a place inland, at 27th near the park, and I can't say I don't love the dining options, but my spiritual home is out in the 40s.

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FIFTHSUN2012 t1_jaeag4f wrote

That’s a trip. I remember it as being a pale blue. It’s funny because those corner houses are used as reference points when you’re driving through the Sunset.

Edit- I just looked it up on Maps and it shows as tan. May have changed hands a few times. The red definitely stands out in the Sunset. Easy to find for out of town visitors. Plus on the edge of the block there’s better parking.

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gorneaux OP t1_jaeces2 wrote

You know what's up.

Yeah, current owner, a friend of mine, decided just before the pando that he needed something with a bit more pizzazz than tan. I'd say he got all that and then some.

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xelleman t1_jaeh0y1 wrote

Wow, scrolling through before I read this and immediately knew it was sunset. I lived on 46th and Taraval for 5 years. Love this.

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GrapeJuice2227 t1_jaeheez wrote

This feels like one of those memories you just have from when you were a kid and you don’t know why

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ExileOC t1_jaenjqn wrote

I lived on 44th & Noriega for years. Hello neighbor!

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amalgamatedchaos t1_jaeot37 wrote

Hey /u/gorneaux , do you lay down your lines while there on location, or do you take photos and do the artwork at home?

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[deleted] t1_jaepwh2 wrote

Feels like I could almost point out where in California this is.

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Run1t t1_jaeuijy wrote

“There’s a Red houuuuse over yonderr”

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gorneaux OP t1_jaexar9 wrote

When I'm out urban sketching, I try to do the whole thing, soup to nuts, right there. With more finished pieces that I do on, uh, begins with co and ends with mission (trying not to break the rules and get deleted here), such as this one, I will generally take source photographs onsite and work from them at home. Particularly with a large size such as this (22"x30"), that saves me a day of standing in the middle of the intersection with a gargantuan piece of paper. .

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gorneaux OP t1_jaf3ao6 wrote

Hey, thanks very much!! I do appreciate it.

Used to be I inked all my lines on co dot dot dot missioned house portraits, but that was just one more inessential thing I stopped doing to speed things up. However, the guy who commissioned this one, who's a damn good comics artist himself, wanted those black lines in there to give more of the comic book look. I didn't think about it at the time, but it was the right call — the black lines help balance out that super-vibrant red (even if it also creates kind of a CAD/illustration look, rather than something painterly).

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gorneaux OP t1_jaf3kp8 wrote

Hey, thanks very much!! I do appreciate it.
Used to be I inked all my lines on co dot dot dot missioned house portraits, but that was just one more inessential thing I stopped doing to speed things up. However, the guy who co (la de dah, music playing here) missioned this one, who's a damn good comics artist himself, wanted those black lines in there to give more of the comic book look. I didn't think about it at the time, but it was the right call — the black lines help balance out that super-vibrant red (even if it also creates kind of a CAD/illustration look, rather than something painterly.

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