how-to

Oil Painting Surfaces - uneven or unwanted sheen and dry spots

I play with transparency in paint and try to hold to the rule of applying fat over lean paint, but sometimes if there is a wax in a medium or if I use OleoGel, I find my surface will dry with dull, repellent spots as seen in the upper portion of exhibit A and on palette in exhibit B.

If we try and apply painting medium to these patches, they bead up, the oil just sits on top and doesn’t soak in an allow us to continue working that area of the panel or canvas.

There are all sorts of solutions (including rubbing a cut, raw potato on those problem spots) but what works for me is a bit, the smallest bit possible to get the effect, of medium rubbed in with a lint-free cloth. The abrasion of the cloth and medium does the trick and saturates your surface!

No need to add retouch varnish or heavy oil (or potato). You’re welcome.

an oil painting close up of unwanted dull spots on the surface

Toward the upper right corner, you can see an almost square section of dull paint that won’t accept medium.

oil medium beading up on surface of palette

You can see the oil beading up here on my palette, it won’t absorb.

Making Giclees in Scale/Proportion to Originals

This is a brief post, just stopping in to make a public bookmark for myself, really. 

If you are going all in the canvas print market or just dabbling, one of the first challenges you'll run into is that the original dimensions of your paintings don't necessarily scale up or down to a popular sizes, i.e. easy to frame for most people. 

Below is a link to Century Editions, who has kindly posted a chart showing scaling options.

Link opens in new tab: www.centuryeditions.com/proportion.php

Canvas or Panel?

Canvas or Panel?

Looking for quick advice on how to choose a panel or canvas for oil painters? Read the post and click the blog post title to get to the video link.