Art, Breath, Paint, Air . . .

Art, Breath, Paint, Air . . .


Showing posts with label palette. Show all posts
Showing posts with label palette. Show all posts

Saturday, January 7, 2012

What 's on my Palette Tonight?


I just felt like sharing what was on my palette a few nights ago. I am working on a figurative commission (can't post it sorry). I use many more pigments than those that just happen to be on my palette that night though for different reasons. Sometimes it is because of the qualities of the pigment and sometimes it is just what I have. I am kind of an equal opportunity painter when it comes to pigments, but it is important to know the qualities of the paints you use before going off willy nilly and putting a lot of unfamiliar paints on your palette. Go to www.gamblincolors.com and watch the video on color space for a great start on understanding your paints. One thing I will say about the video though is that I do not use black to darken a color. It changes the hue and chroma. There are better ways of doing this. Although black can be very effective, you must understand it is someone like a low chroma blue and will act as such. I often have guest colors that I try out. I tend towards paint from M Graham and Gamblin with some other brands mixed in. I like buttery paint. See my other post on my usual palette. I don't use any student grade paint. They contain fillers and sometimes substandard pigments. That is false economy and a waste of time and money. Get good quality paint. M Graham and Gamblin both are made in the US and pack the most pigment to oil ratio possible. M Graham being more buttery because of the use of highly refined walnut oil instead of linseed oil. I like both of these manufacturers and will choose one over the other sometimes only because of a sale . Other times I might like the different qualities for different purposes. Take my color mixing class in January 2012 at my studio and we will go over all this stuff. You will learn a ton! I am also doing a follow up class, as well, in April 2012. "Infuse Your Oil Paintings with Light and Color" at the Northshore Art League  (find the post about it here).

From top left  M Graham Anthraquinone Red (a transparent, clean mixing, high chroma rose red that I use as a substitute for Alizarin Permanent), M Graham ultramarine blue (the gold standard in blues-a flexible, warm, transparent blue that tends towards the red side), Gamblin Cerulean Blue Hue (a blue that tends towards the yellow side, great for skies), Rembrandt Viridian (a cool green that is sometimes good for the areas around the eye-places where the skin is thin. I also use it for landscapes and Rembrandt's is buttery and clean mixing). Rembrandt Sap Green (Sap varies from manufacturer to manufacturer because it is a mix of pigments-I like Rembrandt's the best), M Graham Azo Green (a great warm transparent green I like for portraits and my koi/pond pieces).

Moving in a "U" to the bottom right we have M Graham Titanium White (the most buttery around, sometimes that is good like in the studio, but outside in the heat it can kind of wilt a little. I still use it for plein air though because less resistance equals faster mixing), M Graham Cadmium Yellow Light (an opaque yellow that tends toward the green or cool side. I like M Graham's cads because the walnut oil allows a wonderful brilliance, but I am known to use Gamblin's too), M Graham Indian Yellow (a transparent orange yellow that is great for neutralizing the purple in a Ultramarine/Alizarin mix without changing the value too much so you end up with a dark transparent brown or close to black), Gamblin Gold Ochre (I heart Gold Ochre, a version of yellow ochre with a tranparent modern in the mix so it has more tinting strength, chroma, and transparency), M Graham Cadmium Red (a nice warm, opaque, basic red); Vasari Ruby Violet (this is a handmade paint and is super pricey. I have it because it was given to me at a plein air show, I do really like this violet but not everyone of my friends feels the same, it is somewhat less intense than M Graham's Quinacridone Violet. M Graham's is a transparent high chroma violet that I like for bringing up the intensity of grey reds and violets and also just for intense reds/violets in flowers and such).

The brushes you see in the middle there are Princeton Art & Brush Company #6300 Filberts. They are synthetic bristle brushes (replica of hog hair). They have great spring so they show the paint who is boss. I can get a lot of different brush effects with this brush and will often do most of a painting with just one brush. They come to a fine chiseled point at least until they get used a lot. Like any brush, they wear out. It is just the cost of doing business. I sometimes like the way a well used brush gets splayed out and can give me a hairy brush stroke. But after awhile there is a diminishing return and you just have to replace it.

The pinkish brush in the foreground is a well used brush close to retirement and the white one behind is the same type of brush new. They are the 6300 series filberts. I am pretty sure those are size 8. Every manufacturer has their own size format. There is no industry standard, so look to the millimeter for the size.

I only use synthetics because I don't think animals should have to die for my art. They don't just shave the animal. They need the hair to be as long as possible. There are great synthetic brushes that leave me no need for dead animal cooties.

The smaller brush to the left, in the original picture of my palette, is a size 00 round from Winsor and Newton's Monarch line. I like this medium soft brush for detail work at the end of a painting. Again it is a synthetic-this time to replicate Mongoose hair. Mongoose are actually endangered and internationally protected. You would be surprised what people are willing to do to creatures. Here is a video about the problem in India. Although the audio doesn't seem to work, the pictures show you how they net, bludgeon, and pull out the hair. Although this is illegal now in India, they have made raids and confiscated bags and bags of the stuff. Now, I am not saying I know for a fact, but the popular Langnickel Royal Sable brushes sure look like Mongoose to me. Regardless of whether the Langnickel's are Mongoose, you can bet whatever animal is used, it is subject to a similar fate. I am just not into that kind of bad mojo for my work. I stopped using them years ago when I figured this out. I did a vast internet search and found very little about the use of natural hair in brushes. But now there seems to be a growing concern among artists. See this thread on wet canvas just as an example. Luckily you don't have to be limited to natural hair brushes! Don't be fooled by people who say such in such is the "best" brush for a certain effect. With a little experimentation, I have been able to completely remove natural hair brushes from my painting process.

I will do a post in the future that is more in depth on the synthetics available.

The palette I have is called  Palm Palette Outie. It is specifically made for use with the Soltek Easel, I decided I liked it so much I use it in the studio. It has a piano hinge design so it folds up and has a cover. Although it it not air tight, if I put a plastic bad around it, it keeps the paint wet a bit longer than if left open. I just got this and used it for Sedona Plein Air. See it in action in my post for The Plein Air Scene blog during Sedona Plein Air, 2011.




Thanks for reading! Hope this was informative, Tracey

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Choosing Artist Oil Colors & My Palette

High quality professional grade oil colors are composed of a mix of pigment and a "drying oil." The drying oil is typically linseed oil. But since linseed oil yellows over time, you will also see the use of safflower oil (especially in whites) and walnut oil. Pigments are basically ground up particles that are suspended in oil. They can be ground up earth or rocks such as ochres and iron oxides, burnt things such as wood or bone (often used for blacks), metals such as cadmiums and colbalts, and carbon based pigments such as Napthol and Quinacridone. For an analysis of pigments see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pigment.


The pigments available over the centuries, including today, can be understood from a painter's perspective using Robert Gamblin's Navigating Color Space video. I highly recommend watching this free video several times. In my color mixing class ,we look at the colors on your palette and analyze the pigments used in terms of hue, temperature, chroma, and opacity. This gives us an understanding as to where the paint belongs in color space and how a paint color will behave in a mix.

 
pigments and paint tubes
 
I paint with traditional oils (see below for a list of manufacturers and colors) and use M. Graham Walnut Oil Medium to clean my brushes. The benefit is that you are using buttery traditional oils that are saturated with pigment and can use the walnut oil medium to thin the paints as well as to clean my brushes. It is solvent free painting without resorting to the highly inferior water mixable paints. M Graham oil colors and mediums are available from Dick Blick, Genesis Art Supplies, and other sources. M Graham uses walnut oil instead of linseed oil in its colors. The result is a very buttery paint that dries slightly slower (less waste on your palette from paint drying too fast) that has a beautiful clarity. Both M Graham and Gamblin are domestic manufacturers that produce their paints in small batches and pack the highest pigment load possible in to every tube.

 My palette with a dark mix of transparent colors in the mixing area that I use for the initial drawing stage. You can also see, to the left and below the paint piles, a mix of grey green from palette scrapings the previous day.
 
I generally use a warm and cool of each color and occasionally have "guest colors." I use black sparingly and do not recommend it for beginners. There are GREAT painters who use black; you just have to know how to use it. It should be understood as a blue, and can be used as a replacement for blue in a limited palette. Black will necessarily reduce intensity (or grey) in a mix because it is usually made of burnt things. I can mix a very dark higher chroma color that looks black but is not as dull. For some things however, I just need a true black. When I choose a black, I avoid bone black because this is burnt animal bones. Since I am a vegetarian, it doesn't make sense for me. I will usually get lamp black.

 
In the past, I often chose the nontoxic alternatives to the heavy metals such as cadmiums and cobalts as much as possible. However, Gamblin Artist Oils notes that they use cadmiums that have a very low bio available content, so I have been using those when I need cadmiums (see www.gamblincolors.com). The cadmium is compounded with another element so that it is only minimally available to be absorbed into your body. Better for wildlife too if it gets into the water system. Cadmiums tend to be more opaque than their modern alternatives while the modern pigments tend to be more transparent, higher in chroma (or pop) and tinting strength (remain intense when mixed with white).

My palette of colors changes based on the needs of the particular painting, but generally includes the following. I have noted the order numbers for dickblick.com for my student's convenience but double check them as they might have changed.

 
Colors in 37ml tubes that I use in the Gamblin Artists Oil line:
  • Hansa Yellow Medium (dickblick #00401-4713). (alternate is M.Graham’s Azo Yellow dickblick.com # 01573-4453 or Gamblin’s Cadmium Yellow Light dickblick #00401-4073)
  • Mono Orange (dickblick #00401-4933 ). (alternate is M Graham Indian Yellow dickblick.com # 01573-4163 or Cadmium Yellow Deep)
  • Golden Ochre (dickblick.com # 00401-9033). (alternate is M Graham Yellow Ochre dickblick.com # 01573-4043).
  • Cadmium Red Light (dickblick #004013093) (alternative is M Graham Naphthol Red dickblick.com # 01573-3603).

 Colors in 37ml tubes that I use in the M Graham line:
  • Anthraquinone Red (dickblick.com # 01573-4913) (Alternative is Alizarin Crimson Permanent. Gamblin’s is dickblick #00401-3063)
  •  Ultramarine Blue (dickblick.com # 01573-5233)
  •  Manganese Blue Hue (dickblick.com # 01573-5813) (alternative is Cerulean Blue, Gamblin’s is dickblick #00401-5163)
  • Azo Green (dickblick.com # 01573-7453) Love, Love, Love this one.
  •  Transparent Red Iron Oxide (dickblick.com # 01573-3763)
  •  Titanium White (dickblick.com # 01573-1023)

 Some optional colors that I find useful in the M Graham line:
  • Quinacridone Violet (dickblick.com # 01573-6513)
  • Quinacridone Red (dickblick.com # 01573-3273) and or Rose (dickblick.com # 01573-3793)

Colors that I use from the traditional Rembrandt Oil Color line are:
  •  Sap Green (dickblick #00417-7093)
  • Viridian Green (dickblick #00417-7103)
I will be continuing to post my materials periodically. For those of you who have taken my classes, I will be adding new and updated information as I post--so stay tuned. Please feel free to post comments or questions. Look for my classes at http://traceyfrugoli.com/workshops. See my artwork at http://traceyfrugoli.com/works.

Thanks for reading!
Tracey