Do You Need Expensive Supplies to Start Watercolor Painting?
The Honest Answer About Watercolor Supplies: And What Actually Makes a Difference
Introduction
Before most beginners pick up a brush for the first time, they face a question that has nothing to do with painting: how much do I need to spend? Watercolor supply recommendations online range from inexpensive starter sets to professional materials that cost significantly more, and the advice is often contradictory.
The direct answer is that expensive supplies are not necessary to start. But the fuller answer is more useful: material quality affects your experience in specific, predictable ways, and understanding those ways helps you make better decisions about where to spend and where to save.
This guide covers each category of watercolor supplies with honest criteria for what actually makes a difference in the learning process, and what does not matter until much later.
The two paintings shown here illustrate this difference in practical terms. The balloon composition on the left was painted with an intermediate-quality student-grade paint.
The colors read as clear and distinct, the blues in the background retain their saturation and depth, and the individual balloon colors are vivid enough to stand apart from each other without appearing washed out. The coverage is consistent and the tonal range from light to dark holds across the composition.
The cupcake painting on the right was made with school-grade watercolor paint, the kind typically sold for children's use rather than for art practice. The result is noticeably different.
The colors have a slightly grey, turbid quality: the pinks lean toward a muted, hazy tone rather than a clean saturated pink, and the overall painting has less visual clarity than the balloon composition. The colors are present but lack the crispness and luminosity of the intermediate-grade paint.
Neither painting is technically impossible. Both demonstrate that brush control, layering, and compositional decisions are learnable on either type of paint. But the school-grade paint introduces an additional visual limitation that has nothing to do with skill: the painter is working harder to achieve results that the intermediate-grade paint produces more naturally. When you are also learning water control, timing, and technique simultaneously, that additional resistance is an unnecessary obstacle.
The practical takeaway is not that you need expensive paint to learn. It is that going one step above the very lowest quality level, from school-grade to a decent student-grade set, removes a source of frustration that could otherwise be misattributed to lack of skill.
1. The Honest Answer: Materials Matter, But Not as Much as Practice
The skill that produces good watercolor paintings is not the ability to buy expensive materials. It is the accumulated understanding of how water, pigment, and paper interact. That understanding develops through practice, and it develops on any surface with any paint.
High-quality materials make certain things easier. Transparent pigments from artist-grade paints produce more luminous results. Heavy paper handles water without warping and supports more correction attempts. Good brushes hold their shape and release paint consistently. These differences are real.
But there are two risks at opposite ends of the budget spectrum. Spending too much before you know whether watercolor suits you means that if it does not, expensive materials sit unused.
Spending too little means working with materials that actively resist the techniques you are trying to learn, which makes it genuinely difficult to tell whether the problem is your technique or the materials. Either situation creates unnecessary frustration.
The practical zone for beginners is intermediate quality: good enough that the materials work with you rather than against you, accessible enough that the financial commitment feels proportionate to where you are in the learning process.
2. Paint: What Quality Actually Means
2.1 Student Grade vs Artist Grade
The difference between student-grade and artist-grade watercolor paint is primarily pigment concentration. Artist-grade paints contain a higher ratio of pure pigment to binder, which produces more vibrant, transparent, and lightfast colors.
Student-grade paints contain more filler and binder alongside lower pigment concentrations, which results in colors that are less intense when dry and sometimes less transparent.
This difference is visible but not insurmountable in the early stages of learning. A student working on fundamental technique, water control, and color mixing will progress on student-grade paint.
The limitation becomes more apparent as the skill level rises and the painter begins to work on more nuanced effects that require high pigment transparency and saturation.
The one area where very low-quality paint genuinely impedes learning is consistency. Paints with inconsistent pigment loads produce unpredictable results between colors and between batches, which makes it difficult to develop reliable intuitions about how a mix will behave. Within a decent student-grade range, this is less of an issue.
2.2 What to Look for When Buying
When choosing paint without a specific brand recommendation, three pieces of information on the label are useful. The transparency rating, usually indicated by a small symbol or the words transparent, semi-transparent, or opaque, tells you how the paint will behave in glazing and layering. Transparent pigments are more versatile for most watercolor techniques.
The pigment information, listed as a color index name such as PB29 or PV19, tells you what the paint actually contains. Paints with a single pigment code tend to mix more cleanly than those with multiple pigments blended to approximate a color. Single-pigment paints are worth seeking out even in student-grade ranges.
The lightfastness rating indicates how resistant the color is to fading over time. For learning purposes this matters less, but for any work you want to keep, ratings of AA or A are preferable.
2.3 How Many Colors to Start With
A set of 12 to 24 colors is more than sufficient for beginning watercolor work. The temptation to buy large sets is understandable but counterproductive at the start, because a large number of colors encourages reaching for a pre-made color rather than learning to mix. With a well-chosen set of primaries, you can mix a wider range of tones than a large set used without mixing knowledge.
For more on how to get the most out of a limited palette through mixing, this Watercolor Color Mixing Guide covers the full process including how to create any color from a small set of well-chosen primaries.
2.4 Pans vs Tubes
Watercolor paint comes in two main formats. Pans are small solid cakes of paint that are activated by wetting with a brush. Tubes contain a creamy, concentrated paint that is squeezed onto a palette before use.
For beginners, pans are generally the more practical starting format. They are contained, portable, and require no additional palette unless you want to mix large quantities.
Tubes produce more intense color and are better for large washes, but they require more setup and can dry out if the caps are not secured carefully. A pan set with a built-in mixing palette is a reasonable first purchase for most beginners.
3. Paper: The Material That Makes the Most Difference
If there is one material category where quality affects the learning experience more than any other, it is paper. The difference between appropriate watercolor paper and unsuitable paper is not subtle. It changes how techniques work at a fundamental level.
3.1 Why Paper Quality Matters More Than Paint Quality
Wet-on-wet technique on standard printer paper produces completely different results from the same technique on watercolor paper. The surface structure, absorbency, and weight of watercolor paper are what allow the paint to stay workable long enough to blend, lift, and layer correctly.
On unsuitable paper, the paint dries too quickly, the surface deteriorates under brush pressure, and the paper warps under moisture, creating ridges that cause paint to pool unevenly.
A beginning painter working on inadequate paper cannot accurately assess their technique because the material is interfering with every result. Investing in appropriate paper before anything else is the single most effective decision a beginner can make.
3.2 Weight: The Non-Negotiable Specification
The weight specification is the most important number on watercolor paper packaging. Paper at 140 lb or 300 gsm is the minimum that handles water-based media without immediate warping. Below this weight, paper buckles as soon as it absorbs moisture, creating an unworkable surface.
For more on paper weight, surface types, and how to choose the right paper for your specific needs, this Best Paper for Watercolor Painting guide covers everything in practical detail.
3.3 Cotton vs Cellulose
Watercolor paper is made from either cotton fiber or cellulose (wood pulp). Cotton paper absorbs water slowly and evenly, which keeps the surface workable longer and allows softer blending and smoother wet-on-wet results. It is the professional standard and significantly more expensive.
Cellulose paper absorbs water more quickly and dries faster, which makes certain wet-on-wet techniques more challenging. Hard edges can appear more easily because the working window is shorter. However, cellulose paper at 300 gsm is a valid starting point for beginners on a limited budget.
The faster drying time is a challenge that can be managed with practice, and working on cellulose first means that when you eventually switch to cotton, the improvement in handling feels immediately rewarding rather than taken for granted.
3.4 Surface: Cold Press for Beginners
Cold press paper has a medium texture that works well for most techniques. It is the most common and widely recommended surface for beginners because it handles wet-on-wet, layering, and dry brush equally well without imposing a strong texture on the result. Hot press (smooth) and rough surfaces have specific applications but are not ideal as starting points.
4. Brushes: Where You Can Save Without Compromise
4.1 Synthetic vs Natural Hair
Natural hair brushes, particularly kolinsky sable, are considered the professional standard for watercolor. They hold more water, release paint more evenly, and maintain their shape under repeated use better than synthetic alternatives. They are also significantly more expensive.
Synthetic brushes have improved considerably in recent decades and are a genuine alternative for beginners. A well-made synthetic brush holds enough water for most techniques, returns to a reasonable point after each stroke, and is durable.
The difference between a good synthetic and a kolinsky sable is real but not significant enough to justify the cost at the beginning of a learning process.
4.2 The Minimum Set
Three brushes cover the full range of what a beginning watercolor painter needs. A medium round brush in size 6 or 8 is the workhorse: it handles most painting situations from small detail areas to medium washes.
A smaller round brush in size 2 or 4 covers fine detail work. A larger flat or round brush for background washes and large areas completes the set.
Beginning with three good brushes and learning to use them well is more effective than having a large collection of mediocre ones.
4.3 What to Look For
When assessing a brush before buying, three qualities matter. The brush should form a clean point when wet. It should hold enough water to complete a brushstroke without running dry mid-stroke.
And it should return to its original shape after each stroke rather than splaying out. A brush that fails any of these tests will create problems in the painting that have nothing to do with technique.
5. Other Essential Materials
5.1 Palette
A palette with individual wells for each color and a generous mixing area is essential for keeping colors clean and separate. Ceramic palettes are easy to clean and show color accurately.
Plastic palettes work well if they are hard enough that the paint does not bead on the surface. Avoid very inexpensive plastic palettes that flex or have surfaces that resist the paint.
5.2 Water Containers
Two containers of water are a simple but significant upgrade from one. The first container is for rinsing brushes between colors. The second holds clean water for mixing on the palette and diluting paint.
Using a single container means that the rinse water gradually contaminates every subsequent mix, dulling colors and making clean mixing progressively more difficult as the session goes on.
5.3 Paper Towels
Paper towels are used for blotting brushes to control moisture levels, lifting excess water from the paper surface, and as a quick correction tool when something goes wrong. Any type works.
Keeping a folded paper towel beside the palette during every painting session is one of the simplest habits that produces consistent improvements in water control.
5.4 Securing the Paper
Unsecured paper warps as soon as water is applied, which makes painting on it significantly harder. Masking tape applied along all four edges of a sheet to a rigid board prevents most warping at minimal cost.
A watercolor block, where pages are glued on all four sides, eliminates the problem entirely and is a worthwhile investment once you are painting regularly.
6. What to Buy First: A Practical Starting Order
If budget is limited, the order in which you invest matters. Based on the impact each material has on the learning experience, the priority order is:
Paper first. A 300 gsm cold press watercolor pad or block, cellulose for budget or cotton for a higher starting point. This is where material quality affects the result most directly.
Paint second. A student-grade set of 12 to 24 colors with single-pigment formulations where possible. Enough colors to learn mixing without encouraging dependence on pre-mixed colors.
Brushes third. Two or three synthetic round brushes in different sizes. The difference between a decent synthetic and a natural hair brush is smaller than the difference between appropriate paper and inappropriate paper.
Supporting materials fourth. A palette if one is not included with the paint set, two water containers, paper towels, and masking tape or a watercolor block.
7. When to Upgrade
The right time to invest in better materials is when you have confirmed that watercolor is something you want to continue and when the materials are visibly limiting what you can do rather than your technique being the limiting factor.
The most impactful upgrade is almost always paper. Moving from cellulose to cotton, or from a lower-weight paper to a heavier one, produces an immediate and noticeable improvement in how the surface behaves. The longer working window of cotton paper allows softer wet-on-wet results and more correction attempts before the surface deteriorates.
The second most impactful upgrade is paint. Moving from a basic student-grade range to a higher-quality student-grade or entry-level artist range produces more vibrant, transparent results that are easier to work with in layering and glazing.
Brushes are the last category to upgrade. A good synthetic brush remains a serviceable tool for a long time, and the improvement from upgrading brushes is less dramatic than the improvement from upgrading paper or paint.
Conclusion
You do not need expensive supplies to start watercolor. You need supplies that are adequate enough to let the techniques work as they are supposed to, which is a much lower bar than professional-grade materials.
The practical starting point is a 300 gsm cold press pad, a 12 to 24 color student-grade paint set, two or three synthetic round brushes, and a few supporting materials. From there, the most valuable investment is time spent practicing and developing an understanding of how water, pigment, and paper interact.
For the techniques that those materials will be used to practice, this Watercolor Techniques for Beginners guide covers wet-on-wet, wet-on-dry and dry brush with step-by-step instructions.
And for a complete overview of what watercolor is and how it works before you start, this What is Watercolor: The Beginner's Handbook covers the essential background in practical terms.
Happy painting.









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