How to paint a 9-step value scale

How to Paint a 9-Step Value Scale (And Why It Stops Your Art From Looking Flat)

Let’s be real for a second. You spend three hours on a painting, you step back to look at it, and it just looks… flat. Like a sticker slapped onto a canvas. The apple doesn’t look round, the face looks like a cartoon, and the landscape has zero depth. It’s incredibly frustrating, especially when you feel like you’ve followed all the rules.

The fix isn’t buying more expensive brushes or watching another ten-hour YouTube tutorial. The fix is learning how to mix a 9-step value scale.

If you just want the quick answer on how to actually do it: grab some black and white acrylic paint, draw nine empty boxes in a row on your canvas, and paint the first box pure white and the last box pure black. Next, mix the two together to find the exact middle gray for the center box. Then, just keep splitting the difference – mix your white with your middle gray, and your black with your middle gray – until all nine boxes are filled in. It sounds a bit like boring math homework, but it’s honestly the biggest cheat code for making your art look 3D.

📌 Keypoint Summary

  • The Main Goal: Stop your art from looking flat by mastering light and shadow (which artists call “value”).
  • What You Need: Just Titanium White paint, Ivory Black paint, a brush, a rag, and some paper or canvas.
  • The Method: The “halving” trick. You mix the middle, then mix the middles of the middles. Zero guessing required.
  • The Secret Weapon: Squinting your eyes like you’re trying to read a sign down the street, and using digital tools to double-check your work.

The “Flat Art” Problem (And What Value Actually Is)

Think about the last time you took a photo on your phone and slapped a black-and-white filter on it. Even without color, you could still tell what was what, right? You could see the bright sky, the mid-toned trees, and the deep, dark shadows hiding under the park bench.

That’s value. In the art world, value just means how light or how dark something is.

When you look at paintings by the old masters we talk about a lot here at Prominent Painting – like Renoir or Rembrandt – they weren’t just using cool colors. They were masters of value. Rembrandt used pitch-black shadows to make the bright highlights on a person’s face literally look like they were glowing.

When you paint a 9-step value scale, you are basically building a staircase out of gray.

  • Step 1 is the lightest light (pure white).
  • Step 9 is the darkest dark (pure black).
  • Steps 2 through 8 are all the messy, tricky shades of gray in between.

Why do we care about gray when we just want to paint cool stuff in color? Because every single color has a value. A bright lemon yellow is naturally super light (it sits around step 2 or 3 on our staircase). A deep navy blue is naturally very dark (hanging out around step 7 or 8). If you don’t understand the gray staircase, you won’t know how to mix the right shadows for your colors, and your art will stay flat.

Organizing the Palette and Pre-Mixing

Organizing the Palette and Pre Mixing

Before a brush even touches the canvas, the 9-step scale helps structure color mixing. Because human eyes are easily tricked by color intensity (chroma), it’s easy to misjudge how light or dark a color actually is.

  • The Color-Value Check: An artist uses the scale to identify that a pure lemon yellow might sit at a Value 2, while a raw umber directly out of the tube sits at a Value 8.
  • Pre-mixing Tonal Pools: Many oil and acrylic painters pre-mix a “string” of values on their palette. If they are painting a green landscape, they will mix a Step 3 green, a Step 5 green, and a Step 7 green. This ensures that as they paint, they maintain solid tonal relationships without their colors getting muddy.

Why Exactly 9 Steps?

You might be thinking, “Why nine? Why not just do light, medium, and dark?”

Trust me, I’ve tried the three-step method. It’s okay for a quick sketch, but when you actually paint, three steps make your work look super blocky. It gives off major early-2000s video game vibes. Everything looks like it’s made of Lego bricks because there are no smooth transitions between the light and the shadow.

On the flip side, trying to mix 50 tiny, microscopic shades of gray will make you want to snap your paintbrush in half and quit. Nine steps is the sweet spot. It’s enough to give you smooth, realistic blending, but easy enough that you can actually finish the exercise without losing your mind.

painting to illustrate use of 9-Step Value Scale

The Setup (Prepare for a Little Mess)

You don’t need a fancy studio for this. You’re probably doing this at your kitchen table or your desk. Just grab:

  • Titanium White and Ivory Black acrylic paint. (Acrylic is best here because it dries fast and you don’t need toxic chemicals to clean it up).
  • A piece of canvas paper or heavy cardstock.
  • One decent flat brush.
  • A cup of water and an old rag or paper towel.
  • A ruler and a pencil.

A quick warning before we start: Black acrylic paint is a bully. It is incredibly strong and it will stain your brush, your palette, and your fingers if you aren’t careful. Always, always add the black to the white, never the other way around. If you put a giant blob of black on your palette and try to add white to it, you will end up with a mountain of dark gray and waste half your tube of white paint.

The Mixing Process: A Step-by-Step Survival Guide

Grab your ruler and draw a long rectangle, then chop it up into 9 equal squares. Make them decently big—like, an inch and a half wide. If they are too tiny, you’ll just color outside the lines and get frustrated. Number them 1 through 9.

The Bookends (Boxes 1 and 9)
Let’s get the easy stuff out of the way. Paint Box 1 with pure, straight-out-of-the-tube white. Paint Box 9 with pure black. Now you have your boundaries. Everything else we mix today has to fit somewhere on the bridge between these two extremes.

The Boss Fight: Finding the Middle (Box 5)
Skip over to the exact middle: Box 5. This is where most beginners mess up. You need to mix a gray that is exactly 50% white and 50% black.
Remember the bully rule? Squeeze out a nice puddle of white. Take your brush, pick up a tiny dot of black, and mix it in. It will probably still look way too light. Add another tiny dot. Mix. Add another. You are looking for a true, neutral middle gray. Paint it in Box 5.

The Quarters (Boxes 3 and 7)
Now the math gets easy because we just mix the things we already made.

  • For Box 3, mix your pure white (Box 1) with your middle gray (Box 5). Boom. Perfect light gray.
  • For Box 7, mix your middle gray (Box 5) with your pure black (Box 9). Boom. Perfect dark gray.

Filling in the Blanks (Boxes 2, 4, 6, and 8)
Look at your paper. You have empty boxes sitting right next to painted boxes. Just mix the neighbors!

  • Box 2 is just Box 1 mixed with Box 3.
  • Box 4 is Box 3 mixed with Box 5.
  • You get the idea. Just keep splitting the difference until the whole staircase is full.

Take a step back. It probably looks a little streaky, and some boxes might be a bit off. That is totally fine. The goal isn’t to be a human printer; the goal is to train your brain to see the subtle jumps between light and dark.

The Mixing Process: A Step-by-Step Survival Guide

1
Pure White
2
Light Light Gray
3
Light Gray
4
Medium Light Gray
5
Middle Gray
6
Medium Dark Gray
7
Dark Gray
8
Dark Dark Gray
9
Pure Black
The Bookends (Boxes 1 and 9)
Paint Box 1 with pure white. Paint Box 9 with pure black. These are your boundaries – everything else fits between these two extremes.
The Quarters (Boxes 3 and 7)
Mix your pure white (Box 1) with your middle gray (Box 5) to create Box 3. Mix your middle gray (Box 5) with pure black (Box 9) to create Box 7.
Finding the Middle (Box 5)
Mix white and black to create a true middle gray. Remember: black is a bully! Add tiny dots of black to white, not white to black.
Filling in the Blanks
Mix neighboring boxes: Box 2 = Box 1 + Box 3, Box 4 = Box 3 + Box 5, and so on. Keep splitting the difference until all boxes are filled.
Take a Step Back
Your scale might look streaky or imperfect. That’s totally fine! The goal isn’t perfection – it’s training your eyes to see subtle value differences.

Pro Tips for Success

  • Make your squares at least 1.5 inches wide so you don’t color outside the lines
  • Use two separate water cups: one for clean water, one for dirty water
  • Black paint is strong! Always add black to white, not white to black
  • Squint at your finished scale to check if the values flow smoothly

The “Squint Hack” (Your Eyes Are Lying to You)

Here is a weird trick that every art teacher eventually yells at their students to do. Once your paint is mostly dry, look at your value scale and squint your eyes until your vision gets really blurry.

When you squint, your eyelashes block out the sharp details and the textures of the brushstrokes. You stop seeing “paint” and you only see the raw values. Does the staircase look smooth? Or does Box 4 suddenly jump out at you as being way too dark compared to Box 5?

Squinting is a massive hack. Use it when you are painting a portrait and can’t figure out why the nose looks weird. Squint at your reference photo, then squint at your canvas. The shadows will tell you exactly what you did wrong.

3 Annoying Mistakes You’re Probably Making

Look, we’ve all been there. If your scale looks kind of terrible, you probably fell into one of these traps:

1. The “Gross Water Cup” Mistake
You dip your brush in black, wipe it on your rag, dip it in white, and then rinse it in your water cup. But wait… your water cup is now a murky, swampy gray. Every time you rinse your brush and go back to your pure white paint, you are accidentally adding dirty gray water to it. Your “pure white” box ends up looking like wet cement. Change your water, or use a dedicated “dirty water” cup and a “clean water” cup.

2. Fear of the Dark
Beginners are notoriously scared of pure black. They mix their “dark” shadows, but they are actually just medium-grays. When you do this, your painting loses all its punch. It looks washed out and foggy. Don’t be afraid to push your darks until they are almost black. High contrast is what makes art actually pop off the canvas.

3. The Muddy Purple Gray
Sometimes you mix black and white, and instead of gray, it looks kind of purple or brown. Don’t panic, your paint isn’t broken. Ivory Black is made from charred bones and naturally has a warm, brownish undertone. If your gray looks too purple, just add a microscopic speck of yellow (the opposite of purple on the color wheel) to cancel it out.

Level Up: Stop Guessing and Use Tech

So, you painted your scale. It’s dry. You think it looks pretty good. But honestly? Your eyes are probably lying to you. Our brains are wired to compensate for lighting, which makes it super hard to judge value accurately in the real world.

This is exactly why we built the Value Study Generator over at Prominent Painting. We got tired of guessing, so we made a tool to do it for us.

You can snap a photo of your physical 9-step scale with your phone and upload it to the generator. The tool strips away all the weird lighting in your bedroom and turns your image into a perfect, digital grayscale map. You can hold your physical painting up to your screen and instantly see which boxes you messed up. It takes the ego out of it and just shows you the raw data. It’s an incredible way to train your brain to see like a pro

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FAQs: How to Paint a 9-Step Value Scale

Do I have to use acrylic paint for this?
Not at all. You can do this with watercolors, oils, or even just a standard graphite pencil. If you use watercolors, you don’t even need white paint! You just use more water to make the black paint lighter, and leave the white of the paper completely blank for Box 1.

Why does my middle gray look so weird?
Mixing a perfect 50/50 gray is surprisingly annoying because black pigment is just physically stronger than white pigment. If your Box 5 looks too dark, don’t stress. Just scoop out a little bit of it and mix in more white. It’s an experiment, not a math test.

Is this actually going to make my art better, or is it just busywork?
It is 100% going to make your art better. Every single time you paint a shiny metal cup, a fluffy cloud, or a person’s face, you are just painting different values. Once your brain understands the 9-step scale, you’ll start looking at the real world differently. You’ll notice that the shadow under your desk isn’t just “dark,” it’s maybe a step 7, while the shadow in the corner of the room is a step 9. That’s when your art stops looking flat.

How long should this take me?
Take your time. Put on a good playlist and spend about 30 to 45 minutes just mixing and testing your colors on a scrap piece of paper before you commit them to your final grid. Treat it like a science experiment.

Can I use this for digital art?
Absolutely. If you draw on an iPad or a tablet, the exact same rules apply. Create a new layer, draw nine boxes, and use your grayscale slider to find the perfect steps. The medium changes, but the rules of light and shadow never do. (QW)

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