


It is said
that oilcolours were invented for painting flesh… the paint certainly
stays wet long enough to easily blend and soften. From the 16th Century
until the advent of acrylic colours in the 1960’s, oilcolour was the
Western artist’s main choice for painting. The amount of pigment that
can be loaded into an oil binder and the way light is refracted through
it gives oilpaint its unique luminosity and brilliance. Even in the 21st
Century, its colour strength and blending ability is unsurpassed.
We stock three different types of oilpaint:
Oilcolours
– pigment ground in plant oil (mainly linseed, but also safflower,
poppy, and walnut oils), available both in student quality and
professional quality;
Resin-Oilcolours
– a Renaissance recipe unique to German manufacturer Schmincke, where
excess fatty oils are replaced by carefully measured amounts of natural
resins, that balance the drying, enhance the brilliance, and yellow less
than standard Oilcolours;
Alkyd Oilcolours – pigment ground in a synthetic alkyd resin that greatly shortens the drying time.
All three types are compatible with each other.
Oilcolour dries by absorbing oxygen and
this absorption can increase the volume of the paint layer by up to
15%. Because different colours dry at different rates, this can lead to
cracking. If a fast drying colour is applied over a slow drying colour,
it can crack, as the underlying layer continues to expand as it dries.
This has been avoided traditionally by adding a little more oil to
successive paint layers, described as “fat over lean”, as the addition
of oil will slow the drying down. Nowadays, it is also easy to add
driers to slow-drying base colours to speed them up. There is oilcolour
available that doesn’t expand as it dries – the Mussini Resin-oilcolour
from Schmincke; and oilcolour that dries at an even rate, such as Norma
Professional, also from Schmincke.
Driers are added to paint to speed the
drying for quick execution of an underpainting, or for rapid layering
techniques. A modern synthetic resin called alkyd is a good drier, as it
can half the drying time of a colour and creates a flexible paint film.
Adding too much alkyd resin to oilcolour can result in poor adhesion
for subsequent paint layers. A good rule of thumb for a medium to paint
ratio is no more than 1:4. Alkyd resins are available as liquids, gels,
and pastes, depending on what effect you want them to have on the
consistency of your paint, and popular brand names are Winsor &
Newton Liquin, Schmincke Rapid Medium, and Art Spectrum Liquol, each
with their own characteristics.
Glazes are transparent layers of colour. Traditionally
glazes use linseed oil as an additive to increase the transparency and
flow of the colour. Linseed oil is available in different viscosity,
from very thin, fine Refined Linseed to thick Stand Oil which imparts a
unique drag and closing-over of brush marks. Sometimes other additives
are combined with linseed oil, to increase the drying rate or affect the
gloss.
Try to avoid using solvents such as
turpentine wherever possible – their overuse is a nasty 19th Century
habit that can harm you, your brushes and your painting if not properly
used. For very thin layers, Mussini Medium 1 is a useful alternative
that maintains the film integrity and doesn’t chalk the paint. For
cleaning brushes, see our Brushes Feature Topic.
Varnishing of oilpaintings is done for
both protection and to even out gloss and matt areas, and should take
place several months after completion. Until the oilcolour has fully
cured, it is vulnerable to the solvent in the varnish, and can re-wet or
turn sticky if varnished before time. Timing will depend on thickness
of paint, driers used, climate, and type of varnish. For temporary
protection, or for brightening dull spots, a retouch spray varnish such
as Schmincke Gloss Film can be used.

In the search for the perfect oilcolour binder, many
interesting substances have been added to paint. Rembrandt sometimes
added honey; urine was mentioned by Vasari in Renaissance Italy; and
Michelangelo was rumoured to mix his “manly virility” into his paint!
The need for each artist to hand-make their oilpaint ended in 1841, when
an American living in London, John G. Rand, invented the first
collapsible tube and paint could be pre-made and packaged. Today’s
artists have more colour available to them than ever before.

Norma Professional Oilcolours work particularly well
on the Schmincke Primer, a half-chalk primer with slightly more
absorbency than acrylic gesso. While it’s relatively expensive, it’s a
concentrate (to be diluted up to 30% with water) and once tried, there’s
no substitute! Schmincke Primer fills the weave of the canvas quickly
and creates a warm white, silky-smooth, plaster-type finish which Norma
just glides over, and adheres particularly well to.
The Mussini Medium 3 is a good additive
to the paint to increase flow and speed drying, which - due to its
natural resin composition - does not cause the paint film to seem overly
plastic, unlike alkyd resin.
Transparent Painting Medium is a mix of
Stand Oil, Dammar and siccatives offering characteristics similar to
those of the “Old Master’s” techniques - increasing the drag and
enhancing the translucency of the paint layers.
Neutral Varnish is designed to even out
the dull and shiny patches in oilpainting, and is perfect for those who
want a natural finish to their work.
Black Sable brushes are favoured for
their strength and softness, combining the resilience of hog hair
control of red sable, making them ideal for wet-on-wet and blending
techniques.
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