Did you accidentally leave the cap loose on your watercolor paint tube? Or maybe you just picked up a deal on old watercolors and they've dried up? While watercolor paint in tubes is great to work with, all is not lost when they dry up and harden.
Unlike oils and acrylics, it is easy to reactivate watercolor paint. It is the nature of the paint - the fact that it requires water - that makes it one of the easiest paints to salvage. Don't throw away those tubes, there's a solution.
Many painters prefer the quality and workability of watercolor paint in tubes. Unlike pan watercolors, they are not bone dry. This makes tube paints easier to mix into custom colors and allows you to begin painting right away.
The bad news is you can't soften watercolor paint in a tube once it's dried hard. It will not have the ability to squeeze out of the tube like it used to. The good news is that this doesn't mean you can't use the paint, it simply means that you have to use them as you would your pan paints.
Dry watercolor paint is not the end of the world. The glycerin that is added to tube watercolors has dried up and you are, essentially, left with dry pan watercolors. Before you can add water to reactivate the paints, you have to get it out of the tube.
If the paint has thickened but can still be coaxed out of the tube, squeeze or scrape it onto a palette. It will dry slowly on the palette but remain usable like a watercolor pan. Unlike acrylics, watercolor paint remains water-soluble when dry, so you can always "reactivate" it with a wet brush.
Tip: When moving dry watercolor to a new well, get it thoroughly wet with water, stir it, and allow it to dry again. This allows it to form to the new mold and all you have to do is add water when it's time to paint. When rewetting the paint, give the water a few minutes to react with the paint before painting.
If you're determined to get the paint into a tube-like consistency again, there are a few common additives that you can try.
If you work the dried paint enough, it should come back to a consistency similar to its original state. Then again, it may never be as smooth as the original, but a granular or gritty paint can be useful for textures like sand or rust.
Also, if you choose to reconstitute all of your paint at once rather than using it as a pan watercolor, make sure to place it in an air-tight container. If you don't it will just dry out again.