





The last 2 I've completed look like they have a sepia filter! I have no clue why they are so warm/brown. I still really like it, but I think it would have been cuter with grays instead of shades of brown.
I would love to know what others do when you have a piece with a ton of lines. I typically do all of one color no matter the shape/size of the cells. However, I have one in my upcoming stack that looks like a stained glass butterfly with SO many thin lines. I am thinking that I should do the thin lines first so I can clean up any wonky lines as I paint the surrounding cells. Thoughts?
One more DONE!
I kept telling myself to trust the process because they always look odd while you're working on it. I still like it, but the colors are VERY different than the reference.
I normally paint all cells on one color before moving to the next color. However, I see a lot of people who paint sections instead of individual colors. I'm sure I'm making it more difficult than it is, but how is this accomplished? Do you switch between paints with every cell and wash your brush a lot? Is there a trick to painting a cell next to another color with wet paint? I'm annoyed that I can't seem to figure this out. 😅
Any tips/tricks for blending colors would be greatly appreciated. I think that is the only hope of making this one look even half way decent. 😬🫣 I typically paint all sections of each color before moving to the next color.