Sometimes it looks blue. Sometimes green. Sometimes gray or almost black.
So what color do you paint "ocean?"
What color is the ocean?
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This color?


This was done with a storm grey base over flex paste. The flexpaste was sculpted to create the appearance of waves and surf. I then washed the grey with successive washes of deep river green, cape cod blue and green sea letting each coat dry before applying the next wash. I drybrushed green sea and then white on the breakers. The whole thing was varnished with several coats of gloss varnish. The colors are all Delta Ceramcoat hobby acrylics.


This was done with a storm grey base over flex paste. The flexpaste was sculpted to create the appearance of waves and surf. I then washed the grey with successive washes of deep river green, cape cod blue and green sea letting each coat dry before applying the next wash. I drybrushed green sea and then white on the breakers. The whole thing was varnished with several coats of gloss varnish. The colors are all Delta Ceramcoat hobby acrylics.
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Water has no color of its own. The ocean will typically reflect the color of the sky. Blue sky, blue ocean. Gray sky, gray ocean. If the water is shallow and clear then you might start to pick up colors from the sea bed, too.
Scott Washburn
www.paperterrain.com
www.paperterrain.com
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When I was in the Pacific the colors our reffering to have to do with depth and the Ocean Floor below that depth.
A deep indigo would be a good color for deep ocean but dry brushing some greenish blue and white on the wave tops will give depth. If you watch a video of surf you can see this color change as more light is allowed to shine through the water at the top o the wave.
Shoals and coral reefs are the reason you have seen green ocean when viewed from the skiy. here the water is less than 100 feet deep and the coral will show up as green when viewed from aircraft. This effect will ring many Pacific and Carabian islands. In the Med and more northern oceans shoals are shallow areas but will usually be Sand or rock. I usually paint these a ligher shade of blue. maybe a royal blue and more ehavily topped with white as more waves are cresting and breaking.
My expierence is that the grey ocean is more a function of weather. When you have heavy overcast the ocean appears grey.
Anyway just my observations hope it helps.
A deep indigo would be a good color for deep ocean but dry brushing some greenish blue and white on the wave tops will give depth. If you watch a video of surf you can see this color change as more light is allowed to shine through the water at the top o the wave.
Shoals and coral reefs are the reason you have seen green ocean when viewed from the skiy. here the water is less than 100 feet deep and the coral will show up as green when viewed from aircraft. This effect will ring many Pacific and Carabian islands. In the Med and more northern oceans shoals are shallow areas but will usually be Sand or rock. I usually paint these a ligher shade of blue. maybe a royal blue and more ehavily topped with white as more waves are cresting and breaking.
My expierence is that the grey ocean is more a function of weather. When you have heavy overcast the ocean appears grey.
Anyway just my observations hope it helps.
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I realize the example ocean color in the links below is a bit on the light side, but it looks ok with my models. (I was trying to compensate for dim indoor lighting; my previous color looked too dark). I do think that matching model and terrain color intensities is important though; I don't believe in "absolute" color values.
A link to an overall view of the same scene: http://home.comcast.net/~mark.hinds/Fig ... xample.jpg

A link to an overall view of the same scene: http://home.comcast.net/~mark.hinds/Fig ... xample.jpg

Mark Hinds