May 9, 2021
Media: watercolor on paper
Size: 12x9 in
Pink Tunnel is a framed and matted watercolor painting of a train surrounded by cherry blossoms. It is the first of the Cherry Blossom series of watercolors and, at the time, was not intended to be a series. I was playing around with reds and pinks in landscapes at the time and I liked this one so much that I painted another and another.
Pink Tunnel - Painted on a 12 inches tall x 9 inches wide sheet of Arches 140 lb, cold pressed, watercolor paper with Daniel Smith Extra Fine watercolors. Painted on February 13, 2021. The frame is a black wood Ambiance gallery frame that is 13.25 inches tall x 15.25 inches wide x 1.5 inches thick. The painting is ready to hang the moment you receive it. I normally get a painting in the mail the next business day after purchase, but always ask for 2 days just in case.
Though I try very hard to get the colors in the photos as close to the actual painting as I can, they may still be slightly different from the physical painting. Digital cameras don't pick up certain colors very well and often change the look of a painting slightly. So, understand that the photos are edited. Pink Tunnel is a framed and matted watercolor painting of a train surrounded by cherry blossoms. It is the first of the Cherry Blossom series of watercolors and, at the time, was not intended to be a series. I was playing around with reds and pinks in landscapes at the time and I liked this one so much that I painted another and another.
Pink Tunnel - Painted on a 12 inches tall x 9 inches wide sheet of Arches 140 lb, cold pressed, watercolor paper with Daniel Smith Extra Fine watercolors. Painted on February 13, 2021. The frame is a black wood Ambiance gallery frame that is 13.25 inches tall x 15.25 inches wide x 1.5 inches thick. The painting is ready to hang the moment you receive it. I normally get a painting in the mail the next business day after purchase, but always ask for 2 days just in case.
Though I try very hard to get the colors in the photos as close to the actual painting as I can, they may still be slightly different from the physical painting. Digital cameras don't pick up certain colors very well and often change the look of a painting slightly. So, understand that the photos are edited. |