aaaghphil.p":3cklnehi said:White spirit.
Note I didn't say turps sub.Sir Percy":2sou8njw said:aaaghphil.p":2sou8njw said:White spirit.
I have a lot of background in this from painting and on a different sort of forum this would be its own can o' worms, often igniting furious debate. Think a sharpening thread here :shock:Sir Percy":g5sp2aqj said:I was just wondering if there was any one kind that was preferred for thinning oil paint.
Cheers, more confusion is the last thing I need. Would they be artists forums, just out of interest?ED65":cgo1vcb4 said:I have a lot of background in this from painting and on a different sort of forum this would be its own can o' worms, often igniting furious debate. Think a sharpening thread here :shock:
Bought some linseed oil paint to try out. Mfrs advice on thinning is 50% paint, 40% linseed oil, 10% Balsam turps.ED65":cgo1vcb4 said:But generally speaking when you buy turpentine in bulk, anything of the kind woodworkers would be interested in, it doesn't matter how it's named on the label they're all pretty much the same thing. And even more importantly in almost all situations it makes zero difference if you use a run-of-the-mill turpentine or white spirit, except for smell.
What kind of paint are you using by the way?
What brand of paint?Sir Percy":15lnq2na said:Cheers, more confusion is the last thing I need. Would they be artists forums, just out of interest?ED65":15lnq2na said:I have a lot of background in this from painting and on a different sort of forum this would be its own can o' worms, often igniting furious debate. Think a sharpening thread here :shock:
Bought some linseed oil paint to try out. Mfrs advice on thinning is 50% paint, 40% linseed oil, 10% Balsam turps.ED65":15lnq2na said:But generally speaking when you buy turpentine in bulk, anything of the kind woodworkers would be interested in, it doesn't matter how it's named on the label they're all pretty much the same thing. And even more importantly in almost all situations it makes zero difference if you use a run-of-the-mill turpentine or white spirit, except for smell.
What kind of paint are you using by the way?
And unsurprisingly, that particular kind I can only find at their only UK stockist.
I've got some Bartoline pure turps, and thought that would do.
Jacob":2jxtga28 said:What kind of paint are you using by the way?
Thanks for that.Sir Percy":8bu2bud5 said:Jacob":8bu2bud5 said:What kind of paint are you using by the way?
Ottoson - sold in the UK through Oricalcum
Yes, any forum dedicated to oil painting will be populated with the whole spectrum from die-hard traditionalists to Sunday painters who don't care about the technicalities. And the trad guys will try to convince anyone who'll listen that nothing worthwhile has been added to the inventory of oil painting in a century. Sometimes several centuries depending on just how traditional they are :lol:Sir Percy":1dq30fad said:Cheers, more confusion is the last thing I need. Would they be artists forums, just out of interest?
I wouldn't take that as gospel by any means. A balsam v. more normal turps won't make a damn bit of difference in that small a quantity for this application. I might be tempted to worry about the exact kind of turpentine I was using painting on canvas and if it made up a greater part of the total liquid volume, but here the spirits component is a diluent, nothing more. You're thinning the paint slightly and it matters very little what you use to do it.Sir Percy":1dq30fad said:Bought some linseed oil paint to try out. Mfrs advice on thinning is 50% paint, 40% linseed oil, 10% Balsam turps.
It will indeed. So will white spirit.Sir Percy":1dq30fad said:I've got some Bartoline pure turps, and thought that would do.
This "good" modern paint must be a very big secret - I've never found it!ED65":zmzej3l6 said:.....
BTW, Jacob won't want to hear this but in terms of durability good modern paints far outstrip plain oil paints. Plain oil paint meaning pigment, binder, maybe a bit of driers and literally not a single other ingredient; if there are added resins they're cheating. The operative part of that is good modern paints. Run-of-the-mill stuff can be decent enough, but you do tend to get what you pay for and high-end paints are streets ahead of what you'll find in the local DIY centre.
Complete opposite of my experience. Several doors painted blue which tend to fade paler very slightly over the years. Application of oil alone brings back the colour.It's the linseed oil that I would actually pay the most attention to, since the colour of it can be so dark. So with light colours, blues in particular, you can see some undesirable colour shifts.
What are these paints - do they have brand names or is it all a big trade secret?ED65":3jvk22ob said:......high-end paints are streets ahead of what you'll find in the local DIY centre.
What has been added is low price per tin, a huge range of colours, quick drying and shiny perfect surfaces.And the trad guys will try to convince anyone who'll listen that nothing worthwhile has been added to the inventory of oil painting in a century
You pass some very high-performing paint every time you walk down the road past a row of parked cars Jacob. Have any Record planes 60 years old or older? There's another example for you.Jacob":1f2bl0dl said:This "good" modern paint must be a very big secret - I've never found it!
It's not that simple. This is one of those thing where it looks like you're comparing like for like but aren't. We're all too painfully aware wood isn't what it used to be so we shouldn't expect that old-growth wood as used on a 90-year-old windowframe is the same as that used on one made yesterday even when the same species is used.Jacob":1f2bl0dl said:It's been a mystery to me that old joinery lasts so long (without preservative even) but modern doesn't. The answer is in the paint.
You're equating rubbing a nearly invisible layer into the surface of dry paint with mixing in nearly an equal volume of additional oil into a pale colour?!Jacob":1f2bl0dl said:Complete opposite of my experience.ED65":1f2bl0dl said:It's the linseed oil that I would actually pay the most attention to, since the colour of it can be so dark. So with light colours, blues in particular, you can see some undesirable colour shifts.
Your definition of "a few years" and mine are obviously very different. Even bog standard indoor gloss should give a service life in excess of two decades with zero upkeep. I'm living in a house at the moment with woodwork that is 30+ years old, clearly the original paint, and it looks to me to be in perfect condition: no worn-through edges, no peeling, no flaking. A few cracks but that's the underlying wood (cheap softwood naturally) and nothing to do with the paint.Jacob":1f2bl0dl said:Old joinery stripped and repainted (modern paint) is only going to last a few years before it starts deteriorating.
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