An Introduction To Pastels Apr 2026
She began with the . Using hard pastels—which contain more binder and keep a sharper edge—she sketched the rough skeleton of a coastal landscape. She didn’t worry about detail yet; she was just "blocking in" the darks and lights. She used a piece of foam pipe insulation to smudge the pigment into the grain of the paper, creating a soft, blurry base. The Building of Color
Elena reached for a stick of , a deep ultramarine blue. Unlike oil paints that required brushes and solvents, pastels were tactile. They were pure pigment held together by the slightest bit of binder, a direct bridge between the artist’s hand and the surface. "The secret," she whispered to herself, "is in the layers." The Foundation An Introduction to Pastels
As she worked, she practiced , lightly dragging a pale peach pastel over the blue of the water. The jagged texture of the paper caught the new color while letting the blue peek through from underneath, creating an optical shimmer that looked like sunlight hitting waves. The Final Highlights She began with the