Color the Emotion

Pick a few colors and create without stiffness.

Expressive Watercolor Flower Collage

This is a sequel to the previous post “Flower for Your Art Journal” where we painted a watercolor flower step-by-step and used it as a collage piece for an art journal spread. This post has more ideas. Now we will paint more flowers and leaves. I also share some tips for artistic expression so that your collage will be more than just a stiff collection of flowers.

Watercolor Flower Collage, how to paint the flowers and make an art journal spread. By Paivi Eerola of Peony and Parakeet.

I have created this spread in Dylusions Creative Journal Square. The paper that I have used for collage flowers is Fabriano Accademia Drawing Paper (200 gsm/94 lbs). My watercolor set is a mix of artist quality pans from different brands. I have finished the spread with colored pencils. You can see these in action in the video of the previous blog post. The previous post also has the basic step-by-step instructions for painting a layered-looking watercolor flower. Let’s now look how you can do more and expand the basic idea!

Get More Variation – Grow Flowers More Naturally!

Instead of painting a separate flower by outlining it right in the beginning, grow a flower from the background!

Paint from the edges to the center.

Painting a background to bring out a watercolor collage flower.

Add more layers.

Adding more layers to the background with watercolors.

While you wait for each layer to dry, you can paint more basic flowers as instructed in the previous blog post.

Painting watercolor collage flowers. In progress photo.

When you can almost see a flower forming in the center, you can start painting petals on it.

Painting watercolor flower collage pieces.

Maybe you can also find smaller flowers near the big one, as I did.

Painting a watercolor flower intuitively.

Cut out the big flower but keep the background too. We will use it for leaves.

Watercolor flower collage pieces on an art journal page. Dylusions Creative Journal ideas.

Add finishing touches to cut flowers with colored pencils.

Get More Variation – Paint Leaves!

Use the background for leaves.

Painting leaves for watercolor flower collage.

Leave some background visible between the brush strokes to get veins. The thinner the veins, the more elegant the leaf looks!

Let’s Pause and Talk About Colors

Ï only made one pink flower for my collage. Other flowers have different colors. If you look at the finished piece, the pink flower really pops up because it’s so different. The green flowers may look unnatural when you have them as collage pieces but in the final piece they look like cousins of the green leaves and the result is natural.

Watercolor flower collage in Dylusions Creative Journal Square. Art journaling ideas.

When you want to build expression, some flowers have to be less important than others. That’s why you can use any color for both flowers and leaves. For example, you can have blue flowers and blue leaves. These are secondary elements to the focal point.

Get More Loose – Let Watercolors Make Some Flowers!

Put most of your energy to make the main flower, as beautiful as you can. You can then paint other flowers very loosely. Namely, some flowers can be more in the background and because flowers are very 3-dimensional things, their outline is often asymmetric. Think about a peony, for example! It has many layers of petals and they point in different directions.

With a fairly broad brush and quite a lot of water, paint multicolored spots and call them flowers.

Painting collage flowers loosely.

You can add some brush strokes on the spots to make the flowers a bit sharper. However, these loose flowers are much less detailed, see my selection below.

Watercolor flower collage in progress.

Before attaching the flowers and leaves, add color to the background.

Get More Expressive – Paint a Multicolored Backround!

Backgrounds with only one color are boring, and not only for the viewer but for the maker as well. Different colors form different areas and when attaching the flowers you have much more fun deciding where to put which flower.

Attaching watercolor flowers on painted background.

I let my background guide me: yellow flowers in the yellow area, green flowers and leaves where the similar tones are, and the pink flower in the center that has the warmest tones. This creates the effect of lighting – the flowers and the background are exposed to the light of similar tone and that makes them look less separate.

Watercolor Flower Collage and Colored Pencils

With colored pencils, you can easily add curvy stems and other delicate lines and darken the surroundings of the focal point so that it catches the eye right away.

Finishing floral art with colored pencils.

Notice that you can also push some flowers further back by coloring over them with background colors.

Working with colored pencils over watercolor collage.

My blurry and loose flowers get green tones. And I also add yellow to the background to push it visually closer to the flower.

Watercolor flower collage - a detail.

Drawing curvy stems makes the collage flowers look less stiff.

Watercolor flower collage - a detail.

You can also add more subtle details to the background by coloring over it with very similar colors that it already has.

Watercolor flower collage - a detail.

Some green details are a little lighter, some little darker, and that’s makes them visible but not too much – the pink center flower has no competitors.

Next-Level Watercolor Flower Collage with Tension

I know that using dark colors is hard for many. These times need light and you want to make bright art, I get it. But light needs darkness to shine. I always finish my work so that it has the tension between the so-called good and the so-called bad. It has sharp and bright details, traditional beauty, safe and tame areas. But also dark colors, unclear, sometimes even scary-looking wilder parts. This tension makes the collage natural because life is like that.

Finnish artist Päivi Eerola and her art journal spread.

I hope this post inspired you to create more watercolor flower collages!

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