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	<title>All the Strange Hours &#187; painting materials</title>
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	<description>Making and Thinking About Visual Art</description>
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		<title>Repost: How to get oil paint to dry quickly</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/20/repost-how-to-get-oil-paint-to-dry-quickly/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/20/repost-how-to-get-oil-paint-to-dry-quickly/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2008 10:50:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lead napthenate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lead white]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Maroger's medium]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/?p=555</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Originally posted 20 September 2006. Month after month, this is the single most popular post on this site. It seems that lots of people are using search engines to answer this question. The joy and the curse of oil paint is how long it takes to dry. It’s great to have lots of time to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Originally posted 20 September 2006.</p>

<p>Month after month, this is the single most popular post on this site. It seems that lots of people are using search engines to answer this question.</p>

<div class="insert">

<p>The joy and the curse of oil paint is how long it takes to dry. It’s great to have lots of time to work with the paint, re-do mistakes, and get those gradients and edges just right. But then, in multi-layered painting, there are times where you just need to stop and let the paint dry. For days. It can be very disruptive to artistic momentum.<span id="more-555"></span></p>

<p>Some painters are fine with letting paintings dry for days or even weeks. They work on more than one piece at a time and come back to each one when it’s ready. But sometimes you want stay with one piece, working every day. Here are some ways to control the rate at which oil paintings dry:</p>


<ol>
<li>Paint in thin layers (like the thickness of a normal coat of house paint).</li>
<li>Avoid slow-drying pigments like titanium white and ivory black. Use fast-drying pigments like lead white and burnt umber.</li>
<li>Use paints ground in linseed oil. Avoid paints made with slow-drying oils like safflower and poppy. Also avoid walnut oil, which dries faster than safflower or poppy, but slower than linseed.</li>
<li>Use a lean lead-containing medium such as Maroger’s (in very small amounts).</li>
<li>Add a bit of solvent to the first layer. Spirits of turpentine and oil of spike interact chemically with the paint, causing it to take up oxygen more rapidly and dry faster. Mineral spirits do not react in any significant way, but all solvents will make the paint  layer thinner, which does make paint dry faster. Don’t add so much solvent to paint that it becomes washy or watery. Just add a little bit.</li>
<li>Paint on a panel primed with glue-chalk gesso. The first layer will have some oil absorbed by the gesso, so the paint dries more quickly.</li>
<li>Add small amounts of metallic driers to the paint. I prefer lead napthenate. I add one tiny drop (from a toothpick) per blob of paint on the palette and mix thoroughly. Excessive use of driers will damage the paint film, but that much should not be any problem. I generally add driers only to slow-drying pigments.</li>
<li>Paint on a copper panel. The first layer of your painting will dry more quickly.</li>
</ol>



<p>Some painters also use alkyd mediums such as Liquin, Neo-Meglip, and Galkyd. I don’t use alkyd mediums and I don’t recommend them. However, they do make oil paint dry faster.</p>

<p>When I need to, I can get oil paint dry in a day, so I don’t usually have to wait for a layer to dry before I can paint over it. Sometimes, I choose to use a medium that makes the paint dry more slowly, or I use a slow-drying pigment like titanium white. But when I do that, I know that the paint will need extra time to dry. My glazing medium (a 50/50 mixture of black oil and Venice turpentine) is somewhat slow-drying, so glazes usually take two or three days to dry.</p>

<p>It’s also the case that I often complete one section of a painting at a time. That way, it doesn’t matter whether yesterday’s paint is dry, because today I’m working on a different part of the picture.</p>

<p><hr /></p>

<h3>Updates</h3>

<p><em>Update 22 February 2007:</em> In a comment on this post, Louis R. Velasquez pointed  out to me that some solvents do cause oil paints to dry more quickly via chemical action. I have corrected the information in this post. I am grateful to Louis for pointing out my error.</p>

<p><em>Update 19 February 2008:</em> Added painting on copper panels as another way to make oil paint dry more quickly.</p>

<p><hr /></p>

<h3>Related post</h3>


<ul>
<li><a title="Oil painting without solvents" href="http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2006/12/29/oil-painting-without-solvents/">Oil painting without solvents </a></li>
</ul>



</div>
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		<item>
		<title>How to varnish an oil painting</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/19/how-to-varnish-an-oil-painting/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/19/how-to-varnish-an-oil-painting/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Oct 2008 02:59:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[varnish]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/?p=564</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[It’s autumn in New England, so I’ve been catching up on varnishing. Why now? Because I have some paintings that have been sitting around for awhile, and because the warm weather is over. That means the humidity is gone. It’s always much better to varnish when the air is very dry. Moisture increases the chances [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s autumn in New England, so I’ve been catching up on varnishing. Why now? Because I have some paintings that have been sitting around for awhile, and because the warm weather is over. That means the humidity is gone. It’s always much better to varnish when the air is very dry. Moisture increases the chances of bloom, in which the varnish becomes slightly milky.</p>

<h3>Do you need to varnish?</h3>

<p>Yes, you do. Oil paintings need varnish to protect them from being damaged by particulate matter in the air. Varnish also serves to even out the gloss produced by different pigments and to slightly darken the darks, increasing contrast and giving the painting a bit of extra “pop.”<span id="more-564"></span></p>

<h3>How long to wait</h3>

<p>One of the inconvenient things about oil paint is that you need to wait before varnishing. If the paint is applied thinly, you should wait at least a couple of months before varnishing. If you have painted with thicker impasto, it may be a year (or more if the paint is really thick) before the painting should be varnished. If you need to sell a painting before it’s ready for varnish, it’s customary to let the buyer know when you recommend varnishing and to volunteer to do the job yourself if the new owner is willing to ship both ways.</p>

<h3>Materials</h3>

<p>While I don’t like dammar varnish in mediums (it’s too soft and too easy to dissolve if the painting is later cleaned), it’s good for varnishing. You can buy dammar crystals and dissolve them in gum turpentine to make your own varnish, or you can buy varnish pre-made. Never add mineral spirits to dammar, as it is not a strong enough solvent for this purpose. Use only high-quality gum turpentine (if it smells really bad, don’t use it) for thinning dammar. Turps works better for cleanup as well.</p>

<p>Because of the turps, always varnish where there is very good ventilation. Choose a spot that is not dusty. Optimally, you would vacuum the room the day before, then let no one into that room until varnish time, so that the dust can settle and thereby stay out of your painting.</p>

<h3>Practice first</h3>

<p>Varnishing smoothly takes a little practice. I’m always scared to varnish a painting I really like, even though it tends to come out just fine. If I haven’t done any varnishing for awhile, I always start by varnishing one or more studies or paintings that came out badly, so I can make any mistakes with them. The first few times you apply varnish, test the whole process out on paintings you don’t care about first. Let those paintings dry and inspect for bloom, missed spots, dust, runs, uneven gloss, or stickiness. If you have such problems, keep practicing on test paintings until you have a process that works consistently for you.</p>

<h3>Varnish process</h3>

<p>I use a two inch natural hair “gesso” brush for varnishing. A wide brush is a must; with a narrower brush it is too easy to miss a few spots (I’ve made this mistake). If necessary, clean the surface of the painting with a clean, lint-free cloth. You can dampen the cloth slightly with turps if necessary. Make sure that there is no way that water or moisture can get on the painting, the brush, or the container.</p>

<p>When you’re ready, dip the brush in the varnish and wipe off the excess on the lid of the container. Apply the varnish thinly and evenly, stroking the brush from one end of the painting to the next. A little varnish covers a surprisingly large area. Don’t add more varnish to the brush until necessary. I tend to keep stroking back and forth across the painting until the varnish becomes tacky. This tends to reduce drips and also reduce the gloss slightly.</p>

<p>When done, clean the brush in turps, then with soap and water. Make sure the water is nowhere near the newly-varnished painting.</p>

<p>Lean the varnished painting against a wall to reduce the likelihood that dust will land on it. Stay out of the room to limit the amount of dust you kick up until the varnish is dry. In cool dry weather, varnish dries overnight. I’ve heard of it taking much longer in warm, humid weather. That’s one reason why it’s a good idea to test your varnish process on a painting you don’t care about first.</p>

<p>h3.</p>

<p><em>Update 9 November 2008:</em> It’s important to clean your varnishing brush thoroughly afterward. You’ll need to clean it in a strong solvent such as turps. Mineral spirits and other odorless thinners won’t dissolve dammar.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The lazy way to get an oil-primed canvas</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/18/the-lazy-way-to-get-an-oil-primed-canvas/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/18/the-lazy-way-to-get-an-oil-primed-canvas/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 19 Oct 2008 01:18:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil priming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/?p=553</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here’s how: Buy an acrylic-primed, stretched canvas and some oil primer. Avoid the ones made poorly with really cheap materials. Clean the canvas with denatured alcohol and let it dry. Spread primer onto the canvas with a knife. Make the layer thin. You can dilute the primer slightly with solvent if desired. Use your fingers [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here’s how:</p>

<ol>
<li>Buy an acrylic-primed, stretched canvas and some oil primer. Avoid the ones made poorly with really cheap materials.</li>
<li>Clean the canvas with denatured alcohol and let it dry.</li>
<li>Spread primer onto the canvas with a knife. Make the layer thin. You can dilute the primer slightly with solvent if desired.</li>
<li>Use your fingers to rub the primer into the weave of the canvas. Keep rubbing until you have a very smooth, very thin layer of primer.</li>
<li>If it’s a leaded primer, then wear gloves and take other precautions as needed to insure that you don’t ingest any.</li>
<li>Place the canvas facing inward toward a wall to limit the amount of dust that will fall onto it before it dries.</li>
<li>Allow the primer to cure for at least several weeks.</li>
</ol>

<p>Is this as good, archivally, as stretching and priming the canvas from scratch? No, it is not. Is it a really bad idea? I don’t see why it would be any worse than painting straight onto acrylic-primed canvas.</p>

<p>It makes a very smooth, nonabsorbent, lovely surface to paint on.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Repost: Archival Permanence</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/13/repost-archival-permanence/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/13/repost-archival-permanence/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 12:05:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art history]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[art materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[art technique]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting methods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[traditional painting methods]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/?p=528</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[First published 20 October 2006. Over time, all paintings deteriorate. Badly made paintings deteriorate quickly, sometimes within a year or two of completion. A painting made with a high level of craftsmanship can last for many years before noticeable changes occur. For most of us, it isn’t worth going to extreme lengths to make our [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First published 20 October 2006.<br /></p>

<div class="insert">

<p>Over time, all paintings deteriorate. Badly made paintings deteriorate quickly, sometimes within a year or two of completion. A painting made with a high level of craftsmanship can last for many years before noticeable changes occur.</p>

<p>For most of us, it isn’t worth going to extreme lengths to make our paintings as permanent as they can possibly be. You could, for example, choose to paint on high-tech aluminum honeycomb panels. These are light, long-lasting, and much better supports for painting than most of those used by artists, because they don’t significantly expand or contract with changes in temperature and humidity. They also cost hundreds or thousands of dollars. If you know that you are a visionary artist who will be producing work of breathtaking magnificence that will be of incredible historic significance, you owe it to future generations to eat only cheap prepackaged noodle dishes at each meal so that you can afford to paint on the most permanent and expensive supports (until you work starts to sell for many thousands of dollars—then, go ahead and treat yourself to a nice juicy tofu burger).</p>

<p><span id="more-528"></span></p>

<p>For the rest of us, not so much. Most paintings by even fairly good artists won’t be saved for much more than a generation. The best way to preserve your paintings is to make them really, really good (or really, really popular, which 20th century artists demonstrated to have no correlation with good). A painting that people like a lot will be hung on a wall in a room that has a reasonably constant temperature and no wild swings in humidity. Almost any painting will survive for a long time under those conditions. And if people really like it, it might hang in a museum or get restored by a conservator if it starts to show signs of wear and tear. If a painting isn’t that great, then even if it’s made with excellent craftsmanship and highly archival materials it’s likely to be kept in the attic, basement, or garage for years at a time. Even well-made paintings won’t last long under those circumstances, and when they start to fall apart, no one will pay for a conservator to fix them. So the most archival quality a painting can have is to be so well-liked that the owner (and the owner’s heirs) could never imagine putting it in a moldy basement.</p>

<p>(Of course, if you are a very famous celebrity such as Sir Paul McCartney, your incredibly bad vanity paintings will be treasured and preserved for centuries. Go figure.)</p>

<p>Nevertheless, I think it’s a smart to construct paintings with quality materials and good craftsmanship, if only so that customers won’t complain until after you are dead. Here are some guidelines for oil painting. If you don’t follow them perfectly, it won’t cause your painting to explode. But the closer you adhere to them, the more likely your painting will be to last a long time under optimal conditions, or survive brief periods under poor conditions. If you want a painting to last a long time under poor conditions, oil paint is a very bad choice of medium.</p>

<ul>
    <li>Rigid supports are better than fabric supports. Fabric is flexible, and every time it flexes (as it will do when temperature or humidity changes) the bond between the support and the paint is affected. Over time, that’s very bad for a painting. Copper, steel, and aluminum panels are excellent supports for painting (although they can be heavy). Wood is OK only if it has been seasoned for a year or two after being cut and planed to size. Hardboard is probably OK if there is a good barrier between the panel and the paint. Tempered hardboard is stronger than untempered and that makes it better (despite what some sources say) even though there is a slight amount of oil in the surface of tempered hardboard. Medium density fiberboard is OK only if it is very well sealed on all sides against moisture.</li>
    <li>It may be that polyester will turn out to be the most archival fabric, because it is more dimensionally stable than organic fabrics like linen and cotton. We don’t know yet.</li>
    <li>Oil grounds are good to paint on. Lead grounds are the best oil grounds, because lead is a very flexible pigment. Acrylic primer (“gesso”) is probably a decent ground to paint on (we’ll know for sure in 100 years) but murder on brushes. Traditional gesso is probably an OK ground on a rigid support (the hide glue in gesso is very strong, which is good, but likes to absorb water, which is bad).</li>
    <li>Use permanent pigments. Alizarin crimson is not permanent, especially in mixtures and when applied very thinly. Impermanent pigments will fade or become dull over time.</li>
    <li>If you use linen, cotton, or hemp as a support, don’t put paint or oil primer directly onto it. The oil will rot the fabric. You need a barrier, such as hide glue or acrylic primer, between the paint and the fabric. Make sure the barrier covers the sides as well as the front of the canvas.</li>
    <li>Don’t apply a lot of thick paint. Thick, heavy layers of impasto are much less permanent than thin layers (about the thickness of a layer of house paint). Several thin layers (allowed to dry in between) are much more permanent than one thick layer. A few expressive blobs of impasto here and there are not going to cause problems, but large areas of thick paint are bad.</li>
    <li>Linseed forms the strongest paint film of the drying oils. Walnut is less strong. Safflower and poppy are weaker still. Because the same stuff that makes the paint film strong also yellows, linseed will yellow more than other oils. But go for a walk through a museum with paintings three or four hundred years old. You probably don’t find yourself thinking, “Wow! those paintings now suck because they’ve yellowed.” (Ignore Brown School paintings from the 17th and 18th centuries that were deliberately painted with an overall dull yellowish tone.) You can barely notice the yellowing, and those paintings were almost all done in linseed. Whites are a little warm, blues turn slightly greenish. That’s how bad the yellowing gets on a well-made painting. It’s barely noticeable, although some paint manufacturers will try to scare you into buying special “non-yellowing” paints made with oils that are less strong. Personally, I only use paints made with linseed and, to a lesser degree, walnut. I avoid paints made with poppy and safflower. If you do use safflower oil, be aware that the kind you can get in a grocery store is almost certainly not the kind that dries properly when mixed with oil paint.</li>
    <li>There are a number of good reasons to avoid student grade paint, but archival permanence is not one of them. Student grade paint from a good company will be as archival as their artist-grade paint.</li>
    <li>It is best to not add anything to your paint—no mediums, no solvents, no nothing. If you do add stuff to the paint, add only a little bit (less than 20% of paint volume). If you add solvents, don’t make the paint watery or washy, just add enough to make the paint more manageable. If you apply a layer of medium to the surface of a dried layer of paint before you paint over it, make it a very thin layer.</li>
    <li>It is best not to add metallic driers to make the paint dry more quickly. If you do add them, I think that lead napthenate is best. Add a tiny amount (like one drop from a toothpick) to a penny-sized blob of paint on your palette. Add driers only to the slow-drying pigments on your palette.</li>
    <li>In my opinion, it has not yet been demonstrated whether alkyd painting mediums (Liquin, Galkyd, Neo-Meglip, and so on) are sufficiently permanent. They are probably fine for single layer, direct painting. I’ve heard a couple of complaints about delamination in multi-layered paintings that may be due to use of alkyds. Some alkyd mediums can also yellow quite a bit. Personally, I don’t see any reason to paint with anything that smells like that.</li>
    <li>If you add solvents and oils to your paint, and you work in layers, it’s best to follow the fat over lean rule. That just means that no layer should have less oil in it than the layer beneath it. So be careful about how you use mediums and avoid painting large areas of lean paints (without much oil in them) like manganese violet over large areas of fat paints (with a lot of oil in them) like ivory black. The fat over lean rule is especially important if you paint in thick layers. In thin layers, it’s still a good idea, but less crucial.</li>
    <li>Varnish the painting after it is dry. By dry, I mean three months to a year after completion, depending on how thick the paint is.</li>
</ul>

<p>Few painters (including me) work according to these guidelines all the time, and yet their paintings don’t generally fall apart rapidly. Oil painting is fairly forgiving, so long as you respect your materials and stay within a reasonable zone of craftsmanship. So long as you do that, there isn’t any reason to worry about archival permanence unless the voices in your head are very insistent that you are going to be the next Michelangelo.</p>

<p>Personally, I doubt that the art conservation robots in the Louvre in the year 2306 will curse my name because I used sub-standard methods requiring them to spend an extra 324.663 seconds fixing one of my paintings. But that would be really cool.</p>

<p><hr /></p>

<p><em>Update 10/23/06:</em> One other point regarding how to construct paintings that will last. If you paint in multiple layers, make sure that each layer adheres to the one below it. A paint layer that is smooth and shiny is not a good surface for painting over, because the next layer of paint has no mechanical tooth to adhere to. You may want to scuff up the surface with a green kitchen scrubee pad or, if you prefer, <a href="../2006/08/05/wet-sanding/">wet sand.</a> If you use a medium that contains a balsam such as Venice turpentine or Canada balsam, the paint will adhere better to the previous layer.</p>

</div>
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		<item>
		<title>Putty</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/12/putty/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/10/12/putty/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Oct 2008 00:59:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[putty]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tad Spurgeon]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[traditional painting methods]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/?p=525</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Do go check out Tad Spurgeon’s excellent site. Since the last time I had been there, he’s really fleshed out a method for making “putty” with various heat bodied oils and different chalks. These putties form a thick, dull grey medium that is mixed with regular paint to adjust it’s transparency and handling characteristics. Although [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Do go check out <a title="Tad Spurgeon" href="http://www.tadspurgeon.com/">Tad Spurgeon’s excellent site.</a> Since the last time I had been there, he’s really fleshed out a method for making “putty” with various heat bodied oils and different chalks. These putties form a thick, dull grey medium that is mixed with regular paint to adjust it’s transparency and handling characteristics. Although the putty is grey all by itself, it has no color when mixed with regular pigmented oil paint.</p>

<p>Painters such as Velazquez and Rembrandt routinely added such materials to their paint. Tad seems well on his way to recreating some of their methods.</p>

<p>Aside from this, Tad has lots of great info on oil painting, including a well-written and useful introduction for beginners. Go there now.</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Another tempera grassa recipe</title>
		<link>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/06/10/another-tempera-grassa-recipe/</link>
		<comments>http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2008/06/10/another-tempera-grassa-recipe/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jun 2008 01:05:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>David</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[art books]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[oil painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tempera]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[clove oil]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[egg tempera painting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lead napthenate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[painting materials]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pietro Annigoni]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Renaissance]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[tempera grassa]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[traditional painting methods]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Those who’ve been reading here for awhile or have delved into the archives know that I’ve sometimes experimented with a traditional painting medium called tempera grassa. TG was most commonly used in the 15th and 16th centuries; it represents a transitional medium between egg tempera and true oil painting. TG consists of pigment mixed with [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Those who’ve been reading here for awhile or have delved into the archives know that I’ve sometimes experimented with a traditional painting medium called <a href="http://rourkevisualart.com/wordpress/2006/07/17/tempera-grassa-1/">tempera grassa.</a> TG was most commonly used in the 15th and 16th centuries; it represents a transitional medium between egg tempera and true oil painting. TG consists of pigment mixed with an emulsion of egg and oil. Since the 16th century, TG has been fairly obscure—the best recent example would be the 20th century Italian master, <a title="Pietro Annigonni" href="http://www.artrenewal.org/asp/database/art.asp?aid=191" target="_blank">Pietro Annigoni.</a></p>

<p>In the 19th century (especially in Germany), painting recipes were developed that involved various combinations of tempera ingredients, often including some combination of egg white, whole egg, linseed oil, stand oil, dammar varnish, stand oil, and turpentine. You can find many such recipes on the internet with a few simple Google searches. I’ve usually avoided these relatively complex recipes in favor of simple emulsions of egg yolk (the traditional binder for egg tempera) and linseed or walnut oil, mixed with pigment/water paste.</p>

<p>Recently, I ran across a <a title="book on tempera painting" href="http://www.classicalworkshop.com/html_books/egtemp/" target="_blank">web reprint</a> of <em>Egg Tempera Painting, Tempera Underpainting, Oil Emulsion Painting: A Manual of Technique,</em> by Vaclav Vitlacyl and Rupert Davidson Turnbull. Published in 1935, it is a compendium of various tempera techniques. One that caught my eye is a recipe they call “putrido.” Putrido is one name for tempera grassa (because it starts to smell bad after a few days). They say that this is based on a recipe from an old manuscript found in Venice. For all I know it’s what was used in the Renaissance.</p>

<blockquote><p>Take whatever quantity of dry color you wish to prepare. Divide it into two equal parts. Rub up one part with <em>yolk</em> of egg <em>only</em> into a fairly stiff paste. Rub up the other part with sun-bleached linseed oil, to about the consistency of ordinary tube colours. (To save time or trouble, it is possible to use ordinary tube oil colours, but to be sure of your ingredients, it is always advisable to grind your own colour in oil.) The part that is rubbed up with oil may be slightly larger in quantity than the part rubbed with yolk of egg. Then take the two parts so prepared and grind them together, preferably on the marble slab. It will be found that when these two parts are put together, the resultant mixture will stiffen at once into a very stiff paste, too stiff to be easily rubbed. This may be softened down by the addition of either water, emulsion, or linseed oil. If you wish to use the Putrido in its leaner form, add either water or the emulsion (Medium Fat Emulsion), but if you wish to paint with it as an oil paint using oil as the medium, then thin it down with oil. In either case, add the water, the emulsion, or the oil very slowly, only a few drops at a time, until the paste becomes a smooth cream easily handled on the marble slab.</p></blockquote>

<p>I find this to be pretty interesting. It is a recipe that is similar to what I’ve done before, is simple to make, doesn’t involve solvents, and uses egg yolk (rather than the white or the whole egg), with which I am more familiar. They suggest that adding a small amount of oil of clove will preserve the paint mixture and allow it to be kept for some time (although not indefinitely). I expect that storing them in a refrigerator, especially in warm weather, would be a good idea. The oil of clove would also act as a retarder for the oil component of the paint, causing to dry more slowly. That could be a good or a bad thing, but I expect one would have to wait between layers for the paint to dry. You could try to balance the retarding effect of the clove oil by adding a small amount of lead napthenate, but that makes for a more complex reaction than I am really comfortable with.</p>

<p>I’ll have to try this recipe soon. I have a large painting that I started in tempera and then stopped work on. It might make an excellent underpainting for this TG recipe.</p>
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