Monday, November 17, 2014

Fresh paint A Backdrop

Paint a Backdrop


Painting a backdrop is the foundation to any good stage or movie scene. In film, backdrops are often performed on a larger scale and are preferred to computer generated images. The inspiration artists bring to creating a scene is invaluable. Before painting a backdrop, consider your medium. Film and theatre backdrops are constructed differently according to the human or camera eye that views them.


Instructions


1. Build a clear idea of your project and goals. Once you understand the concept, consider the execution. Conditions such as weather, humidity, lighting, surface, glare, smoke, and fans affect the work.


2. Research your subject. Know the storyline, setting, and time period of the play or film. Create your design using inspirational sources such as photos, plant life, or architecture. Choose a focus that blends 2-D and 3-D elements seamlessly.


3. Select your materials with care. Foundations of stone, sheet board or canvas must be properly and securely mounted, attached, prepped, sanded, paint primed, and sealed. Screws, strings, and chalk lines must not show. Consider how materials affect each other, like painting on metal, or how brushstrokes appear on grooved surfaces. Choose the right paint base for your scale.


4. Consider the full set with actors, costumes, props, changing lighting, and music. Backdrops should fit the mood or movement of the scene: this takes individual creativity. Backdrops should compliment, not detract from the performance.


5. Motivate your team and communicate effectively. Even lone painters can consult with clients, props, and historians. Putting together a scene involves a number of facets, so stay updated, resourceful and flexible.


6. Paint from background to foreground, with dark colors in front. Choose a limited palette, and harmonize colors and textures. Use tricks of perspective and optical illusion, but keep it simple. Detail should be realistic but not perfect. The audience must be able to see the backdrop from all perspectives.


7. Finish your piece with matte sealers or fixants. Test the backdrop in performance conditions and keep touch-up supplies on hand. Prepare to store, transport, or disassemble the backdrop once the show has finished.