Watercolor technique – Painting light and shadows with color to accurately depict objects affected by light requires careful observation. It is important to notice the temperature of the light and how it changes the colors of objects illuminated by it. The temperature of natural light is warm at sunrise and sunset, and cool during midday. Also, artificial light is warm under incandescent lighting, and cool under fluorescent (or white) lighting.
Natural Light – Time of Day
Nita Leland, author of Exploring Color describes the effect of light at the time of day as follows:
“Every time of day has its own special light. Early morning light is luminous and clear with high-key color and gentle contrasts. Tints of scarlet, blue-green and violet express the awakening day. At midday a harsher light reveals intense contrasts of color and value, bleaching out highlights. Late afternoon light has a softer golden glow, with distant objects veiled with mist moving toward chromatic neutral tones. Twilight and early evening light are luminous, tending toward blue and violet, with the sunset a deep rich crimson. Atmospheric buildup throughout the day causes red rays to scatter widely and fill the sky and landscape with color.”
~ Nita Leland
Understanding Value Before Color
Before focusing on color, it is essential to establish a clear value structure. Light and shadow relationships depend more on value contrast than on the exact hue used. Even highly saturated colors must conform to the hierarchy of lightest lights and darkest darks.
In watercolor, preserving light values is especially important because whites and highlights are achieved by leaving the paper untouched. Shadows should be dark enough to describe form, but not so dark that they overpower the light. Maintaining a limited value range in shadow areas helps preserve luminosity and transparency throughout the painting.
Use a gray scale to help determine a color’s tonal value.
Suggested Watercolors and Glazing for Light Effects
Use the glazing technique with transparent and semi-transparent watercolors. For a warm, luminous glow, paint a very light yellow as the first layer. Use analogous colors in multiple layers for a bright, clear glaze. Use Primary colors to create Secondary colors. To tone down the intensity of a color, use its complementary color layered over or under it.
The purest transparent Primary colors to use are: Aureolin, Cobalt Blue and Permanent Rose.
A limited palette encourages color harmony and ensures that both light and shadow areas feel unified. Mixing shadow colors from the same pigments used in the light areas creates a more natural and cohesive painting than introducing unrelated dark colors.
Natural Light – Color in Shadows
In nature, shadows are not a flat gray or dark neutral color. Instead, the local color of objects are visible through the shadowed areas. Look closely and observe that there are more than one color within the shadows.
For warm shadows use analogous colors that are darker than the object’s local color. Use the wet-on-wet technique and drop in colors in the shadow area and let them mingle naturally to create more interesting shadows. For cool shadows use transparent blues, violets, and greens.
Reflected Light Within Shadows
Shadows are often influenced by reflected light from surrounding surfaces. Light bouncing off the ground, nearby objects, or walls can introduce subtle color shifts into shadowed areas. Grass may reflect green into a shadow, while warm earth or stone can reflect golden or reddish tones.
Reflected light often softens the darkest part of a shadow and prevents it from appearing flat or lifeless. Observing these subtle color variations adds depth and realism while maintaining the transparency that watercolor is known for.
Core Shadows vs. Cast Shadows
Understanding the difference between core shadows and cast shadows helps clarify how light describes form.
- Core shadows appear on the object itself, where the light source does not directly reach. These shadows are usually softer, more transparent, and influenced by reflected light.
- Cast shadows are projected onto another surface by the object blocking the light. They are typically darkest near the object and become softer and lighter as they move away.
Watercolor naturally supports these distinctions through controlled glazing and edge variation.
Hard and Soft Shadow Edges
The quality of a shadow edge is determined by the strength and distance of the light source.
- Strong, direct light creates hard-edged shadows with clear boundaries.
- Diffused or indirect light produces softer edges and gradual transitions.
In watercolor, edge control depends on timing and moisture. Shadows painted on damp paper will have soft, natural transitions, while shadows applied to dry paper will retain sharper edges. Varying edge softness within a single shadow helps convey realism and depth.
Atmospheric Perspective in Light and Shadows
As objects recede into the distance, both light and shadows become lighter, cooler, and less defined. This effect, known as atmospheric perspective, occurs because particles in the air scatter light and reduce contrast.
Foreground shadows tend to be darker, warmer, and more detailed, while distant shadows shift toward cooler, neutral tones. Applying this principle strengthens the sense of space and depth, especially in landscape painting.
Common Mistakes When Painting Light and Shadows in Watercolor
- Making shadows too dark or opaque
- Using black or gray straight from the tube
- Ignoring temperature differences between light and shadow
- Overworking shadow areas and losing transparency
- Forgetting that shadows still contain color and reflected light
Avoiding these issues helps preserve the freshness and luminosity that make watercolor such a compelling medium.