English language

How to pronounce watercolorist in English?

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Type Words
Synonyms watercolourist
Type of painter
Derivation watercolor

Examples of watercolorist

watercolorist
Pauline Geerlings is a well-known Riverside watercolorist and mixed-media artist.
From the pe.com
Watercolorist Tom Nicholas painting at an American Watercolor Society demonstration.
From the en.wikipedia.org
A watercolorist captured their show using an easel at the side of the stage.
From the freep.com
Thompson is also a watercolorist and teaches art classes at the Des Plaines Park District.
From the dailyherald.com
Wells met many of her friends who were also taking classes from this local watercolorist.
From the tennessean.com
The Appleton native is a self-taught watercolorist, who speaks modestly about her success.
From the jsonline.com
As three rare examples reveal, she was also a gifted if independent-minded watercolorist.
From the denverpost.com
Her father, Frank Millington, was a publisher and minor watercolorist.
From the nytimes.com
Japanese painter Chiura Obata was a watercolorist at Yosemite.
From the sltrib.com
More examples
  • A painter who paints with watercolors
  • Watercolor (US) or watercolour (UK), also aquarelle from French, is a painting method. A watercolor is the medium or the resulting artwork, in which the paints are made of pigments suspended in a water soluble vehicle. ...
  • (Watercolors (album)) Watercolors is Pat Metheny's second album, released in 1977.
  • (Watercolors (film)) Watercolors is the 2008 award-winning debut feature film by American director David Oliveras and starring Tye Olson, Kyle Clare. ...
  • (Watercolors (XM)) Watercolors is a Sirius XM Radio music channel that specializes in playing Smooth Jazz. It is available on channel 71 for both XM and Sirius (where it replaced Jazz Cafe for that service on November 12, 2008), as well as channel 6071 on Dish Network. ...
  • (WATERCOLOR) A vivid water based paint, usually applied to paper, which provides outstanding brilliance and translucence. Purist techniques demand the application of thin glazes without recourse to BODYcolor. ...
  • (watercolor) Paint that uses water-soluble gum as the binder and water as the vehicle. Characterized by transparency. Also, the resulting painting.
  • (Watercolor) A finely ground pigment combined with a water soluble binding agent, commonly gum Arabic. It is usually distributed in either tubes or cakes. Water is used as the vehicle to spread and dilute the color, and it subsequently evaporates. ...
  • (Watercolor) Thin, transparent pigments applied to wet or dry paper, resulting in a range of colors from the most delicate hints to very brilliant, intense hues.