This technique of visually mixing colors was originated by Impressionist artist, Georges Seurat in 1886. It is done by using individual dots of color to form a design or depict an image. In the digital age, pixels, or dots of ink close together do approximately the same thing. This is a fun drawing and painting technique if you tackle it first on a small scale, use an uncomplicated design and follow a few simple steps. Covering an area with dots rather than a swipe of paint might test your patience, but the results are worth it.

Method 1
Method 1 of 2:

Doing Pointillism with Pencils and Markers

  1. You will need a sheet of watercolor paper from a pad for practice. You'll also need an ordinary number 2 pencil, colored markers in various shades, including neutrals, grays, browns and black.
  2. On scrap paper, create a series of dots close together to form a dark area. Hold the paper away from you and see if they are close enough to appear as a spot of black. Now, space them further apart and make them a lighter tone to form a gray area. Continue playing with dots making them further apart until they fade to white.
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  3. Angle your pencil slightly and rub to make a patch of gray tone. Then, lighten it as you work paler and paler until it goes to white.
  4. Try mixing the dots to see if you can create green and violet when viewed at a distance.
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Method 2
Method 2 of 2:

Doing Pointillism with Paint

  1. Gather your watercolors and other supplies. Use a set containing dry pads or watercolors in tubes in primary colors and black. Also, prepare a work space, large container of water, and tissues.
  2. Trim the bristles of a cheap easel painting brush to ½ inch long. First tape around the bristles to secure them and cut through with ordinary scissors. Remove tape.
  3. This can be a flower, animal, bird, fish, or plan to do an abstract design.
  4. Keep it simple.
  5. Touch the brush to an area of paint and on practice paper. When you stamp the brush aim for getting individual dots of color. Practice until you achieve this dotted effect.
  6. One method is to do the dark areas first.
  7. Enjoy the process of painting with tiny dots.
    • Another way is to under paint an area with a watercolor wash. Use a normal watercolor brush for this. Allow it to dry and then use your special stippling brush to paint dots over the colored area.
  8. See whether the colors merge from a distance. You might consider going back in and reworking an area with larger dots. Do this by using a small, pointed brush and painting each dot individually.
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      Tips

      • Use this texturing device when you want to enliven and personalize a piece of art you are doing.


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