The colors after dried depends on
1) the wine you use (and drink afterwards) very much.
I like Carbernet Sauvignon in both after-dried colors (not wine red but gray, often blueish dark gray which I like) and the taste with scent.
2) somehow degree of oxidation (I think) and
3)
how much wine you apply on paper. Thin wine layer drys relatively fast and the color changes in most cases while with thick
layer the color becomes dark (which is not necessarily good) or deep in a
good way and taking more time.
Besides these (mentioned in Wine Paintings Mystery - 2)
4) Paper quality
and
5) Combinations of all the above factors plus some other mysterious unknown factors.
Small amount of wine on tissue paper. Even one month later it still keeps the original wine red. Remarkable in a way.
A large amount of wine on common sketchbook paper. Deep purple.
Quick sketch on the back side of breakfast tray paper, thin and shiny. Blueish light gray.
Different grape wines used on the same common sketch book paper - See below
Generally the outcome is unpredictable. This is fun.
Study continues.
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