Painting landscapes with depth using atmospheric perspective makes your picture look like it has real mountains and skies, just like when you look out a window.
Imagine you're looking at a big park from the top of a hill. The trees right in front of you are clear and green, but the ones far away seem blue-ish and blurry, almost like they're covered in fog. That’s atmospheric perspective!
How it works
- Closer things look bigger, brighter, and more detailed, like your favorite toy when you’re right next to it.
- Farther things look smaller, lighter (like gray or blue), and less clear, like a distant car that seems tiny and hazy.
So, when you paint a landscape:
- Use bright, strong colors for objects close to the viewer.
- Use softer, lighter colors for objects far away. It’s like giving your picture a foggy filter in the background!
This trick helps make your painting feel real, as if you could walk into it!
Examples
- Adding blue tones to the sky helps show how far away clouds are.
- The trees in the background are smaller and less detailed than those up close.
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See also
- How Does Art Smarts: Introduction to Atmospheric Perspective Work?
- How Does Art Explainer 2: Surface and Depth Work?
- How Does Create Distance In Your Paintings | Atmospheric Perspective Work?
- How Does Using COLOUR and CONTRAST to create DEPTH Work?
- How Does Creating Depth in Watercolor (The Three Keys) Work?