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Reddit mentions of Outus 24 Pieces Plastic Paint Palettes 6 Well Rectangular Watercolor Palette Painting Tray, White

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Reddit mentions: 1

We found 1 Reddit mentions of Outus 24 Pieces Plastic Paint Palettes 6 Well Rectangular Watercolor Palette Painting Tray, White. Here are the top ones.

Outus 24 Pieces Plastic Paint Palettes 6 Well Rectangular Watercolor Palette Painting Tray, White
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Palette measurement: this set of palettes can hold up to 6 colors and is 0.5 inch in well depth, and they are approx. 5 inches in length, 3.5 inches in widthMaterial: this set of watercolor plates are made of good quality plastic in white color, corrosion resistant, with smooth surface, easy to wash and cleanEasy to use: 6 wells can keep pigments in different colors separate, very easy and convenient for you to use whiling paintingWide usage: these palettes fit for these people, such as painters, fine artists, crafts, art students, etc., also a good helper for hobbyistsQuantity: this package includes 24 pieces of white plastic palette, enough for you to use
Specs:
ColorWhite
Height0.4724409444 Inches
Length4.9606299162 Inches
Weight0.72532084198 Pounds
Width3.4251968469 Inches

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Found 1 comment on Outus 24 Pieces Plastic Paint Palettes 6 Well Rectangular Watercolor Palette Painting Tray, White:

u/ReklisAbandon ยท 3 pointsr/KingdomDeath

Yeah I think Dawnstone would be a good base to try. Maybe pair it with administratum gray?

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I personally use a wet palette but I would suggest one of those cheap paint palettes if all you're doing are these 2 colors. Something like this: https://www.amazon.com/Outus-Palettes-Rectangular-Watercolor-Painting/dp/B074CX7DZC/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1542130885&sr=8-5&keywords=small+paint+palette

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Priming color really shouldn't matter that much as your base color will cover it all, but here are the pros and cons of both:

White: Takes far less layers to give good paint coverage if you're painting with lighter colors. The downside is if you have hard to reach areas it will be blatantly obvious if you missed any.

Black: Forgiving for hard to reach areas and easier to work with for dark colors.

What I do, though I don't know how much it will help here, is prime black, then prime again with white (or gray) from just the top. This gives you kind of the best of both worlds since your highlight areas (bright colors) will be white, and your shadow areas (dark colors) will be black. And it helps give you ideas of where to place your highlights and shadows. Like this WIP shot I took recently (ignoring the feathers): Dragonfly Shinto WIP

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