Q: Why do you have so many pastels?

Barbara’s Studio
A: Our eyes can see infinitely more colors than the relative few that are made into pastels. When I layer pigments onto the sandpaper substrate, I mix new colors directly on the painting. This has the result of making many of my colors unrepeatable. The short answer is, I need lots of pastels so that I can mix new colors.
I have been working exclusively with soft pastel for nearly 40 years. Each pastel stick has unique mixing properties that depend on what was used as a binder to hold the dry pigment together. Some soft pastels are oily, some are buttery, some are powdery, some crumble easily, some are harder. Each one feels slightly different when I apply it to the sandpaper.
Soft pastel is distinct among paint media. Oil painters need only a few tubes of paint to make any number of colors, but pastels are not easily combined to form new colors. I learned how to mix colors by experimenting. In the process I developed a personal and unique science of color-mixing and blending. This is one of the factors that makes my work so recognizable and sets it apart from that of other pastel painters.
Comments are welcome.
Posted on March 15, 2025, in 2025, 2025, An Artist's Life, Creative Process, Pastel Painting, Studio, Working methods and tagged answer, binder, blending, buttery, colors, combined, crumble, depend, developed, different, directly, distinct, easily, exclusively, experimenting, factors, harder, infinitely, learned, mixing, number, oil painters, painting, pastel painters, pastels, personal, pigment, powdery, pricess, properties, recognizable, relative, result, sandpaper, science of color-mixing, slightly, Studio, substrate, together, unique, unrepeatable, working. Bookmark the permalink. Comments Off on Q: Why do you have so many pastels?.