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Color Theory for Markers: Elegant Violet or Purple Florals (Live Swatching - Episode 9)

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Color Theory for Violet and Purple Alcohol Markers

Episode 9 - Violet (Iris) Swatching

It’s hard not to like purple and the Violet family of Copic Markers look so pretty!

But the color theory techniques we’ve used in previous episodes of our Color Theory lessons don’t work well with the V family.

Have you looked at what’s across the color wheel from violet? How do you shade with yellow????

Complementary underpainting for violet simply doesn’t work with markers.

In our blue lessons, we encountered a similar problem but violet adds two new challenges— value and temperature conflicts.

How do we shade and underpaint purple for realistic florals, clothing, or other violet objects? Episode 9 of our Applied Color Theory lessons shows you how to make beautiful purple shade with a fun twist.

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Resources & Learning Aids

FREE video at YouTube

Livestreaming at YouTube on

Friday, July 21st at 1pm EDT

In this episode, Amy shares her color swatching process to select the ideal blending combination to color a sophisticated and complex violet Iris blossom…

Or is it purple? Well discuss that question!

Supplies and colors are listed at the bottom of this page. Specific markers and/or pencils will be added after the livestream ends.

Did you miss Episode 8? watch it here:

Amy’s Swatch Sheet

(scanned immediately after the livestream))

Final Violets

(chosen during the livestream)

COPIC BLEND: V17, V25, BV02, BV00, BV0000

UNDERPAINT: G94

Extra Colors

(stem and spathe)

COPIC GREEN BLEND: G94, G24, G21, G20

UNDERPAINT: V25

COPIC YELLOW BLEND: Y17, Y13

UNDERPAINT: BV02?

Prismacolor Colored Pencils

PC932 Violet, PC1008 Parma Violet, PC994 Process Red, PC1090 Kelp Green, PC1034 Goldenrod, PC938 White

PAPER: Strathmore Bristol 300, Smooth finish


TIP: Copic V markers skew warm as they get lighter

As we saw with V-Zeros and V-Teens, the lighter the color, the pinker it looks.

TIP: Value and saturation are more important than matching the color in the photo reference exactly

Value = lighter/darker Saturation = how dirty the color is. We create shade with value and saturation, so as long as we choose appropriate shade colors, it will look like a dimensional iris even if the violet isn’t a direct match.

TIP: Yellow ink is not as dark as you think

The last number on the yellow caps (the value) is often wrong by 3, 4, or even 5 steps. Yellow ink has a ton of solvent in the mixture which means a “dark” yellow often isn’t as strong as you expect for shading. The extra solvent can also damage darker markers.

Learn color theory! Illustrator Amy Shulke’s free YouTube series applies theory to Copic Markers. Color along with the three month kit including digi stamps, worksheets, color wheel. | VanillaArts.com | Realism with Copic Markers

Purchase the Kit

Color along with Amy - Summer 2023 Color Theory kit

This kit covers THREE months of YouTube lessons: June, July, and August.

Easy PDF digital downloads include:

  • 3 flower blossom PNG digital stamps—

    • Forget-Me-Not (episode 8)

    • Iris (episode 10)

    • Rosebud (episode 12)

  • 3 PDF worksheets (June, July, August) targeting specific colors from the photo reference

  • Amy’s PDF Copic color wheel

Free Photo Reference

Our bearded iris photo reference provides lots of violet color inspiration.

References are important because you can’t color realistic violet until you can see realistic violet.

Download the free photo reference from Pixabay here.

After You’ve Practiced…

Swatch violet markers and color along with Amy using the small bearded iris line art in the Summer 2023 kit.

Once you’ve practiced a few times and feel comfortable, use the same marker and pencil selections on a larger iris project.

Bearded Iris - Digital Line Art

Ideal for Copic Marker, colored pencil, watercolor or mixed media

Illustrated by Amy Shulke.

Color like an Artist

Vanilla Beans is a weekly Saturday newsletter full of coloring tips and articles about developing your artistry.

Announcements and video notifications are also sent to this mailing list. Click to subscribe.

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Read More

Beginner level. Click above for more info.

Color with Violet and Blue Violet

Designed for large scale, realistic coloring. Amy’s illustrations are drawn with minimal texture marks or decorations to let your marker art shine.

Color “Begonia and Balloons” with the blue violet Copic Markers we select in Episode 9

Color realistic lilacs with Amy’s advanced “Sweet Lilac” kit

Take a Class

Amy has classes featuring yellow and yellow coloring technique

Or focus on blending skills

Never worry about blending again. Master beginner to advanced blends in 12 weeks.

Advanced Copic class. Create a dimensional hydrangea with warm purple and cool violet.

More About Violet Markers

We test Copic inks. See results here.

Copic underpaint blending recipes.

Copic project palettes using color theory.

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Supply List

(to be updated after Amy selects markers and pencils in the June 16th livestream)

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Previous Color Theory Episodes: