Weekend Watercolor for Snow Days: Embracing the Magic of Winter Painting
When the world outside turns into a muffled, monochrome scene of white and grey, there is no better way to spend a snow day than with a paintbrush in hand. While the weather outside is frightful, the watercolor studio—even if it is just the corner of your kitchen table—becomes absolutely delightful. Watercolor is a perfect medium for capturing the essence of winter, offering a unique opportunity to embrace the fluid, soft, and sometimes unpredictable nature of snow and light. It is a slow, methodical art form that perfectly mirrors the quiet pause that a snowstorm brings. Setting the Cozy Scene for Winter Art
A snow day is the perfect excuse to slow down and create. Before starting your weekend watercolor project, set the stage for a cozy, creative experience. Gather your supplies: a watercolor set with plenty of blues, greys, and indigo; a few round brushes (a large mop brush for washes and a small brush for details); and heavy-weight watercolor paper that can withstand a lot of moisture. To make it truly a winter retreat, fill a mug with hot chocolate or tea, light a candle, and perhaps play some quiet acoustic music.
Working in watercolors is particularly meditative on a snowy weekend. You are not trying to paint every single snowflake, but rather the feeling of the day—the quiet, the cold, and the subtle beauty of the falling snow. Let the atmosphere outside influence your art. If it is a bright, sunny day after a storm, you will want intense, contrasting colors. If it is a quiet, overcast afternoon, you will focus on muted tones, soft greys, and muted blues. Mastering Winter Landscapes: Techniques and Tips
One of the best watercolor techniques for winter landscapes is wet-on-wet. By wetting your paper first, you can let colors bleed into each other, perfectly mimicking the blurry, soft edges of a soft snowfall. Start by painting a soft wash of grey, violet, or soft blue for the sky, and watch as the colors blend naturally, creating a dreamy backdrop for your winter scene.
For the snow itself, the key is to leave the paper white. Instead of trying to paint white, you will be painting the shadows on the snow. Use pale, delicate shades of lavender, cerulean blue, or pale grey to define the drifts and curves of the ground. When these cool, delicate tones are placed next to dark tree trunks or evergreen boughs, the white paper will look incredibly bright and crisp, truly capturing the light of a winter day.
Another essential technique is the “dry brush” method, which is perfect for adding texture to tree bark or painting light, airy snow falling on branches. Simply keep your brush relatively dry with a small amount of concentrated paint and drag it across the textured surface of your watercolor paper. This creates a rough, scratchy effect that contrasts beautifully with the soft, wet-on-wet washes. Capturing the Mood: Color Palette and Subject Matter
A winter palette doesn’t have to be boring. While you might reach for your neutrals, look for hidden colors in the landscape. The sky often has a warm undertone of pink or yellow just before sunset, while the shadows in the snow are rarely just grey—they are filled with blues, purples, and even subtle greens. Experiment with blending Prussian blue with a touch of burnt sienna for a moody grey, or mix ultramarine with alizarin crimson for a deep, cold purple.
For your, subject matter, keep it simple and evocative. A lone, snow-covered pine tree is a classic for a reason—it offers strong shape and texture. A rustic, snow-covered fence line leading into the distance adds depth and a sense of quiet, rural life. You could also paint close-up studies of winter berries, with their vibrant red berries providing a stunning, high-contrast pop of color against a background of white snow and dark, frozen branches.
Don’t be afraid to let the paint run and play. The best watercolor paintings often happen when you let the medium do what it wants. If your sky bleeds into your trees, embrace the soft focus effect. If a smudge of blue happens in the wrong place, it might just become a beautiful shadow you didn’t expect.
Weekend watercolor for snow days is not about perfection, but rather about capturing the quiet, magical atmosphere of the moment. With a few simple tools, some creativity, and a willingness to embrace the unpredictability of the medium, you can turn a cold, indoor day into a beautiful, creative experience. Let the snow fall, and let your creativity flow right along with it.