Progress on this horse has been a constantly shifting series of skirmishes. Overall the progress has been towards a darker, denser animal than what I first had in mind. On the positive side, I have learned so much about repairing various errors! My confidence has been built up amazingly! But I also wonder if I could ever paint a horse without messing him up! It's only after NaMoPaiMo that I feel I'm "up" with the skills; if I started over now, I'd hit closer to my original intent.
But then, my original intent wasn't very focused. It did not know what it was doing. Ten layers later, this horse is strongly himself, born of haptic exploration and with delighted triumph. He could be no other than what he is: Totally for me, no customers or competition involved. That is such a great relief.
![]() |
| Kotinga Layer 7 |
Let's briefly return to Layer 7. As told, the speckling was causing me to doubt my sealant. It turned out I was right. Layer 6 was the last with my old can of Krylon matte. Farewell old friend: You've done wonders on 4 previous horses all the way back to 2018 (!), but that graininess is just not cutting it. The temperatures were bitter too and I called a halt. When the temps rose again, on Tuesday the 10th, I was outside testing my new can. First a little Stablemate and then Kotinga enjoyed the fruits of Rustoleum. (Below, you can just see the test SM's legs.) The SM told me this spray was likely to be more glossy, a claim which turned out to be untrue. But since I wanted a more glossy horse, he made my choice easier.
![]() |
| Layer 8 before sealing |
Despite being covered earlier, there is more to Layer 7: It was also the place where I made my gravest error. This was alcohol-painting for some gray shadings. Palominos have gray skin, and I wanted to show this on his lower legs, muzzle, undercarriage and other shadings. Alas, alas. I chose too dark a pastel mix and would spend the rest of NaMoPaiMo trying to undo this. This photo is actually Layer 8 but shows the situation.
![]() |
| Layer 8 Chest shadings |
What was acceptable for the inguinal and muzzle turned out horrible on the chest. I learned, also (oh I wish I didn't have to KEEP learning this!) that combining alcohol-painting with regular pastel painting just isn't a good idea on a horse as large as this. Ambolena's triumph has been a difficult act to follow. Gilding the Lily
It was during the spraying of Layer 8 that Kotinga had a bad accident. These goofs are always where you don't remember exactly how it happened! He fell over, I grabbed him, he twisted somehow and when he rose up straight again he had a scratch on his butt.
![]() |
| Layer 8 after |
To my flustered, astonished and pained eye, it looked just like the Amazon logo.
![]() |
| Layer 8 hip scratch |
How is this possible?! cries the agonized heart. I have put so much work into this horse!! And in one drop he's ruined everything. It'll take me a long time to fix this one. As it turned out, this scratch was greatly reduced (I had the skill) but not entirely disappeared. My horse was going to live with it, a minor flaw to go with his other flaws. All along he's been tippy, but I'd been careful. Maybe now, on the 10th day, with victory within smelling distance, I was getting sloppy. Impatience is real.
With pasteling there's always two stages to the layers, the before and the after sealing (spraying). The before stage is when you try out your ideas. The after is when you find out whether you succeeded. The after is sometimes a case of reducing your expectations, or shall we say, more kindly, adjusting them.
Layer 9 was full of lessons for me. It was during this layer I tried out my ideas about sanding. Take a piece of very fine sandpaper (320 grit) and, holding it folded, very very gently touch it to the horse. Oh the delicacy of that touch! I was glad to discover I could be that light of hand; it felt like a heritage from tackmaking. The trick turned out to be considering it not so much sanding as being a change of color at that minutely tiny area. Over several layers, this worked well for me.
![]() |
| Layer 9 before |
Kotinga had accumulated a trio of notable errors. There was the hip, the near shoulder and the chest. After spraying, they looked like this:
![]() |
| Layer 9 after, Hip scratch |
The hip wasn't too bad. The shoulder was still a mess, and I was calling it a pit.
![]() |
Layer 9 after, near shoulder |
And the chest was dreadful, despite my sanding skill.
![]() |
| Layer 9 after, chest |
As with the hip scratch, this area would not fully recover, but be coated over and reach a point where I finally decided it was okay.
All along Kotinga was getting darker,... and flatter. I think my biggest lesson with this horse was failing to consider that the sealant made him darker. The success of Layer 4's copper had blinded me. (H'hmm, Ambolena, anyone?!) Somewhere around Layer 5 I'd lost the muscle shadings and I could not recover them. What was possible with a light horse going dark was not possible, for me, with a dark horse going light. It could be that more layers might've solved it; but I was out of time.
![]() |
| Layer 10, after |
Layer 10's most notable aspect, besides a gathering acceptance of his being completed, was the decision to test out his last step, pastel gilding with PearlEx. Testing: Had I not learned, the hard way, to test?!? Not with alcohol, but the regular way, I dusted his off foreleg with Brilliant Or, using the dedicated PearlEx brush first discovered with Brasenose back in 2018, my first NaMoPaiMo. Brasenose Finished. Yes, Kotinga is my fifth NaMo model to be finished. All five of them used PearlEx. I was pleased to see the leg come out with a golden glow. Thus his last step would be an all-over gilding. Not like Ambolena's, but with more of a softer effect, my dream of a metallic palomino was coming true.




















































