For those of you watching this tutorial, please know that our approach to filming this tutorial was to provide very basic information on the differences between oil and acrylic paint for someone who has little to no experience at all with this materials. (thus, the "for beginners" in the video title.) Since it is impossible for us to know what each individual person watching this video has access to in terms of a place to paint, (whether it's in a home studio, outdoors, at a local arts organization) we err on being conservative and cautious when presenting information on toxic materials and being responsible about safe disposal of materials that cannot be poured down the sink or placed in a regular trash can without causing harm to the environment. There are probably some of you who do have that circumstance or facility , but we felt that it would be irresponsible for us to make the assumption that everyone watching this video does. There are certainly nuances and complexities to the toxicity of certain materials, (not to mention so many manufacturers and pigments, each of which are different!) but our point is for people to understand that oil painting isn't a practice that you can casually maintain the way you could if you are doing a pencil drawing. I'm sure there are some of you watching this video who are much more advanced in your painting practice, have logged many more years, and have tried out many more different materials that we don't mention in this tutorial. Beginners in acrylic and oil painting have a lot of hurtles to deal with when they first start painting. As you progress and find which mediums and techniques are right for you, and develop preferences for your own customized painting technique, you may have different experiences than we talk about above. Please feel free to share your experiences and techniques in the comment section so we can all learn together. See our other acrylic & oil tutorials! Oil Painting: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html (part 1) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YyzyeAZI9sI.html (part 2) stretching canvas: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zXXPvJPP6oY.html , still life acrylic painting: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html and mixed media acrylic painting: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mH8PdNzNNKA.html Enjoy! -Prof Lieu
Thank you for this video. I’m glad I watched it. I was thinking of switching to oil at some point but because I live in a one bedroom apartment with very little ventilation. I will stay with acrylics.
I paint in my room with my pets present in oils, I do not use any solvents, I don't use any toxic paints, I don't use any water or liquid that I can spill down the toilet, I use a jar of linseed oil for thinning the paints and I use a completely safe, nontoxic and pet safe brushcleaner to clean my brushes. Nothing emits fumes, and everything I use is pet safe.
This is not ideal, but I do think it's okay if you are in a room with lots of windows, that are all open, and keep them open after you are done to let the room air out. -Prof Lieu
I used to enrage my mom when I used to oil paint at home---and I had a basement studio a la Dexter's Lab! I swear she could tell when I even slightly opened a can of turpentine! Thank goodness I was able to afford walnut and linseed oil after a while and eventually water soluble Holbeins!
I'm a watercolor person, but my friend who is a professional artist (who sells a lot) only paints in acrylic. When I asked why, he kind of covered his mouth and whispered, "I don't want to clean brushes."
I may or may not be guilty of leaving my brushes oily for a day or two after painting because I was too lazy to clean them😳 Oil painters definitely envy acrylic painters a little - Hema Somaya, Art Prof Staff
@@bizzareadventure8576 acrylic painters dont throw out their brushes - it's just a joke about cleaning brushes. acrylic paint is cleaned up in 30 seconds with tap water... far easier than cleaning up after oils.
Oh my god, I painted in acrylics before moving on to oils and I swear to everything good above, the cleaning process is devestating. I've definitly ruined a few used brushes because I forgot about them.
And it's more than just brushes for me. I was kind of dissapointed trying cheap acrylics. Not that it didn't work for me, but I hated the notion of having something else in mind other than painting. I love how you can basically paint everything over in acrylics, but water color gets me the option of going full neanderthal on my living room (with the TV as a reference, listening to music and all that) and clean everything once I'm done. I have found paint in my face and while my SO more or less yields to that, I don't want to have acrylics dry in my face. Maybe I should paint in finger paints.
I love that, I think about every type of paint as a new language you get to learn! We also have a gouache tutorial that you might like: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-0I7DnrfskI0.html -Prof Lieu
the worst part is that i live in the mountains of colorado so its cold outside a lot so soemtiems its too cold to open then windows. i get a headache after painting with oils for like an hour
A watercolorist here: whenever I mix viridian and alizarin crimson I never get a nuetral I always get a really dark almost black purple (not nuetral but still gorgeous) ಥ‿ಥ
No freaking way. ALEX! You were my counselor at Cheley Camps freaking AGES AGO! You got me into art there and i just graduated from Ringling College or Art and Design! So much inspiration from you!
I switched to oils for the richer softer effects, but you can paint with oil and not have it be toxic, I don't use terps, use laundry detergent in a jar to soak them, then Murphy's oil soap to srcub them, and no need for toxic oil mediums. I either use linseed or walnut oil. Very safe..
I also use linseed always w oils what's fun to play around with...was inspired by my fave acrylic painter for thinning is using food grade and nontoxic aroma oils... like put a little lemon oil in my yellow...it's fun how ever I do not know how it will degrade over many years..
I'm a broke high school student and I like to paint acrylic because it's not so expensive... I only have 5 colors at my disposal: cinnabar red, magenta, bright yellow, cyan and ultra marine That's really all you need!
I'm a fan of a limited palette (although Alex Rowe is not!) I feel like when I have tons of colors it makes things too complicated. You might like our oil painting tutorial which explains this more: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html -Prof Lieu
Same! Im a broke highschool student, and a limited palette is what i use. I do get the charm of getting more colors tho. I spend lots of time mixing paint, and having more colors would cut that time.
I feel like this is such an important video. I find in the small local art worlds that people dont take acrylic seriously or only think of it as used by beginner artists who aren't quite sure what they're doing. While they take oil very seriously, hell at one of the galleries that I sell my more gifty art at I've seen amateur oil painters hang paintings that are still wet and undeveloped and then wonder why they dont sell and why their work gets messed up. I do wish it would change though and I'm looking into starting a class there for professionalism in painting for the people who are new to making art to sell to the public. But what I like about the more professional art world is that more people take acrylic seriously. It was game changing to see an acrylic painting at the art institute of chicago. I've never seen one in the Denver art museum. And I'm attending SAIC this fall and am so excited to be able to work with acrylic in a serious setting and not just have it be seen as a starting point. Acrylic works best for me because its fast, and on a bad pain day, I'm still able to make a 4 ft tall painting within 3 hours if it goes well whereas with oil I cant be around the fumes and the texture of the paint really hurts me to use and it takes forever.
Thanks for your thoughtful comment! I think the biases against certain media are often times really specific to the venue and the people surrounding that community. Some places I've been to people are super uptight about stuff like that, I've been to other places where no one cared what you made your art with! You might like Lauryn Welch's tutorial on acrylic painting, she mixes stuff like coffee grounds into the paint and gets the coolest textures: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mH8PdNzNNKA.html -Prof Lieu
Just to be clear, oil paints are not toxic. The pigments used in both oil and acrylic are the same, so any toxicity from pigment is the same between mediums. If you choose to use toxic thinners, that would be an issue but you don't need to do so to paint with oils. You also don't need to pain indirect, so drying time is only an issue for those who do.
This needs to be made much more clear! It is not the oil paints in particular that are toxic. It is the SOLVENTS! Not only is the idea of oil paint in general being toxic turning people off from the medium (it sure did for me), but it kind of waters down the understanding of which parts need to be handled with which precautions. Just the paints itself, oil paints have a much lower toxicity than the resin acrylate based acrylic paints. A lot of the oils in oil paint are edible (walnut oil, for example, is actually used in cooking), while the resin for acrylic paints is absolutely not. The fumes for the solvents (even odourless mineral spirits), is what causes the toxicity and requires ventilation. If you paint without solvents, there is no need for the scaremongering.
Thanks Richard, I feel like we need to make another video on this, because we don't really make it clear what is toxic and why, and it could be read as scaremongering like @gadgeteer suggests. The pigments are indeed the same! There is real toxicity in your cads and cobalts no matter the medium, but one can use hue imitations if they're worried about it. However, what I learned in school (and I could be wrong), is that oil suspensions are more easily absorbed by the micro tears in the skin than acrylic suspensions, just because of size of the particles, drying time, and coagulation. One should really be wearing gloves for both mediums though. I think sanding is the biggest issue, but that's also applicable to both mediums. Always wear a mask when sanding down your work, because the worst thing you can do is inhale cadmium particles! Anyway, thanks for your thoughts and please always let us know if we're saying something that doesn't sound right! We have artists from all different fields and experiences giving tutorials here, so what we've learned may not be the same as somebody else! -Lauryn (Art Prof Teaching Artist)
@@itsgoingtobeok-justbreathe4808 you can easily clean your oil painting brushes with water and brush soap after painting. In between, wiping off on a paper towel and using different brushes for lights and darks avoids the use of solvents. Solvents are absolutely NOT necessary for cleaning brushes. Another misconception.
Great discussion and I enjoy the harmony you have with each other. I haven't used oil since I was 17 when I discovered acrylic. But I always wondered if I should go back to it for the beautiful effects you can create. Unfortunately, I don't have a proper space for oils and I wouldn't want to deal with the disposal. So I'll stick with acrylics. My best method for extending the drying time for acrylics is using a wet canvas. It keeps them wet for days.
Thanks! We had a lot of fun filming this. Yes, sometimes oil just doesn't make sense if you don't have the proper facilities. Good luck with your acrylic work!!
@@Morticia147 I haven't spent a lot of time painting with watersoluble oils, but I did try them out once when I was at an art store and they were demoing it. I think it's great as an option, but the "feel" of the paint in my brush wasn't the same as what I get with actual oil paints. I think for oil paint, which lets you react to the smallest subtleties in the media, that would make too much of a difference for me to switch. -Prof Lieu
Such stark differences in painting styles and opinions on techniques, each thing one said was basically contradicted by the other artist AND YET, they never got rude or snappy or annoyed with each other.. I loved every bit of this beautiful collaboration 🥰
That was honestly such a good video. When you search for the difference, most people on RU-vid just paint 2 eyes and let you decide which one looks best. Thanks for this rundown!
The best of both worlds would be oil over acrylic. Acrylic is good for effects, textures, drips and other things that would take 2 years to fully dry if you used oil.. Paint what you can in acrylic then glaze (and/or add impasto) in oil.
i was like hey i want to try watercolor, ew i don't like how this looks, painted with oil for 3 yrs went down to acrylic for special projects, went down to water color for curiosity, plays with inks. ended up being a mixed media hobby artist.
I LOVE going to a country I've never been to and just wandering around for 18hrs. C'MON LADY! Controlling less allows nature/life to play a bigger role, & be more of a collaborator. The strokes that the universe makes on its own are often way cooler than anything we could've done intentionally. And artists who walk the tightrope of intention + nature's surprises have the most compelling work to me. Leave room for life to do magic on its own!
I resonate with this lovely lady like CRAZY. I'm a oil painting freak, I could never go back to acrylics. I feel like acrylic paint doesn't let me dance on the canvas, it's more like a battle and race with time, no blending! I just feel oils so much! First moment I switched was around 4 years ago and I knew in that moment I will never go back! Every time I use oils now I feel low key happy and so comfortable. Also all the other stuff about pallet knives and sketching and filling white canvas first, literally EVERYTHING that I do and found useful, that is so nice to hear someone successful and professional has the same opinions! Both of those people are so talented, this was amazing to watch, thank you!! ❤️
We're so glad you connected with this video!! Clara has the best methods, so you're way ahead of the game if you do things in a similar way, haha :) If you liked this video, you might also enjoy this oil tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
Glad it was helpful! If you'd like to watch another oil tutorial, feel free to check this one out: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
At least with acrylic painting, I think it’s actually really important to start with really cheap paint. That way you have to work extra hard to make things look good, and when you finally get really nice paints, you’ll suddenly be so much better. You’ll learn some super useful things from cheap paints that you can then apply to the nicer paints.
That's an interesting idea, it definitely makes sense though! Acrylic is tough as is, so if you can master cheap acrylics you'll coast once you invest in better paints. If you liked this video, you might also enjoy this one: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mH8PdNzNNKA.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
I don't agree. I think it's best to get medium like good quality acrylics. Cheap ones are horrible, they're pretty expensive still and don't work well at all, and you don't get much out of them. But if you pay slightly moreeeee you'll get much better quality and more in quantity too. The quantity is the most important part for me, specifically for white 😂
I almost dropped oils until I realized that you can paint totally fume-free. In the 15-1600s oils were used without turpentine or thinners. They would simply add a bit more oil to make it more fluid. You can rinse your brush in oil too, and then wash with soap. Only problem is that it makes drying even slower.
Something that i also find interesting is that when oils and acrylics dry They dry differently color wise Acrylics dry darker while oils retain the color. Its just like how watercolors dry lighter than what you worked with so Mixing colors and preparing for the painting makes a vastly different mindset
AAAAAAAH IM GLAD I FOUND THIS CHANNEL THIS IS SUCH A GEM I JUST STARTED USING ACRYLIC AND THEY WERE BAD LIKE REALLY AND HAVIN FOUND THIS CHANNEL MAKES ME HAPPY
Glad you found us! Alex Rowe has an acrylic painting tutorial that might be helpful to you, ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html, and we have this other acrylic tutorial with Lauryn Welch where she shows really terrific mixed media techniques: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mH8PdNzNNKA.html -Prof Lieu
Worried about hazardous waste and ventilation? Try water-soluble oils. Less stressful and they handle just as well. They do dry faster than traditional oils, however.
Problem I had with them is they seem to be very hard to clean out of brushes, the brush looks clean then you find they are rock hard when you go back to paint
Great discussion! I'm an acrylic painter, and I liked your premise of "its not better or worse, just different". Also, I loved the part about how the painting will be ugly before it starts looking good! I would always get discouraged because of this, but after watching some time lapse painting from start to finish, I was able to trust the process and keep the endpoint in mind.
Thanks for sharing your experience painting! Our playlist of painting tutorials here, you might like them: ru-vid.com/group/PLvt8_pMl6ywk7zc4BskYW33YEBno7tGph -Marc Stier, Art Prof Staff
I think you would probably like this video of me and Alex arguing over JC Leyendecker: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-QMUTQYpinQM.html or this one about HR Giger: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-1LCYGUgAV9M.html -Prof Lieu
I’ve used oil paints for years and recently used acrylics, and oh my gosh it took me a while to get used to working quickly with it because it would dry so quick, I’m used to taking weeks to finish a piece. For cleaning my brushes I wipe off excess paint with newspaper, soak in clean spirit for about 15 minutes then thoroughly wash with warm water and a gentle hand wash. My brushes are still going strong after 10 years. I paint in my bedroom and leave it to dry in another room over night, always with a window open (and layer up sweaters if it’s cold!). Agree with the point of building up layers of oils, I do my base colours, then shadows, then maybe some more shadows, then light areas, then details, then details in the details, then finishing touches. Depending what I’m doing can take 2-6 weeks to finish something then wait another month before it’s touch dry, so it’s certainly taught me patience with it!! But the payoff when you take the time is so worth it.
That's interesting because I did it the opposite: years of acrylic and later with oil! I was so relieved to use oil because the quick dry time for acrylic drove me nuts. Btw, for acrylic there are now lots of materials like Slow Dry Medium and Matte Medium that can slow down the drying process, Alex Rowe explains it in our acrylic painting tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html -Prof Lieu
I am new to painting, and have the basic equipment for acrylic painting. I LOVED this discussion so much! I wish I could take a class from each of you. Thank you so much!! And BTW, you both are master painters, and so beautifully accomplished!
Thank you so much for this sweet comment and for being part of our family! Yay, for starting acrylic painting, we’d love to see what you make so tag us on instagram @art.prof, use the hashtag #artprofshare or share them on our discord server discord.gg/g5XQRpT! - Hema Somaya, Art Prof Staff
When she says you shouldn’t just paint with oils at home cause of fumes, and I’m looking up at my set up of oil paints that I’ve using for the past couple weeks
I'm a complete non-artist, but this was a most fascinating discussion that was so pleasant to watch. The interaction was delightful without any egotism getting in the way. Each was respectful to the other. Thank you.
There is an inbetween; my favourite water soluble oil paint! It dries slightly faster and the texture is a little different from traditional oil. But theres no fumes, you can use water to clean and dilute the paint!
Listening to you about oil vs acrylic is extreme awesome for me. I’m self taught so your critics and advise are so important and helpful to me ,thank you. So after 4 yrs of painting acrylics...I’m just now transitioning into oils. I appreciate the caistioninary advise very much.
Wow, glad I stumbled over this. One of the most informative and entertaining conversations for a beginner. Thank you for making it and being so in-depth
Thank you, just doing our job! You might find this beginners art fundamentals playlist helpful: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vt-xNqlhGGA.html - Hema Somaya, Art Prof Staff
Love hearing the differences not only between oil and acrylics but most importantly between two artist styles. As a beginner, I’m always wondering if I’m doing it right but this, I think, will help me not worry so much about that. Thank you so much
You are so welcome! We're happy you enjoy them :D good luck with your painting, I'm sure you'll be fantastic! We also have a painting track on our website if you're interested, feel free to check it out here: artprof.org/learn/tracks/painting-basics-track/ - Mia, Art Prof Staff
I feel like this video is Assuming that there is only one way to paint it with oil paints. A lot of us painters who use oil, paint wet iinto wet, use impasto (textured paint) use scraffito,, scrape off, use painting knives to paint with, paint expressionistically, abstractly, in many more styles and techniques.
you don't understand what a valuable resource this is for me, at school I was so closed minded about art and have only recently discovered painting and art history and how boundless and freeing it can be. I feel like I really really missed out during the time I was in formal education and people would have taught me this stuff for free. you know what, I feel like I have the potential to get pretty good at this and I can't thank you guys enough for these videos. I love your content and work means a lot, peace
I'm so glad to hear that! One thing I love about being an artist is that it's literally never too late to get going. (compared to gymnasts who have to retire when they are 25 years old!) Enjoy! -Prof Lieu
I'm so glad you mentioned fire safety. I don't use oils and I see so many tutorials and I'm thinking, oil, solvents, rags, that is massive fire risk and no one mentions it.
This was so good. Having both aspects (oil and acrylic) put side by side and discussed was fascinating. Thank you both for an engaging, informative session🖼🎨
I absolutely love such conversations. Two educated people talk and share their view. Different approach, different school, different medium. A-wwu-suuumm!
I spoke to a graduate of the Gage Academy Atelier. He showed me his brushes. They looked NEW! He never used solvents to clean them! Wipe off as much wet paint from your brush as you can onto a cloth or piece of paper kitchen towel. ( if you like, you can dip the bristles into some plain cooking oil to loosen the paint more..then re-wipe.) Place a small amount of Dawn dish soap in your hand ( some people use the inside of the cut half of a tennis ball if they don't want direct contact with the paint ) Press the bristles down into the soap ...first one side, then the other. Rinse in warmish but not hot water. Repeat. Last, press bristles again on the surface of a bar of white Ivory Soap until no pigment shows. Rinse well. If you like, you can go through the same steps using Murphy's Oil Soap. Shape the bristles with your fingers and lay the brush on its side until dry. The only time I use solvents is when I make my medium: in a plastic squeeze jar I mix one half solvent to one half linseed oil. I can remove oil paint from anything using just Dawn dish soap. I specify Dawn because it is the best! --------- Almost any oil paint color can be found that is not made with toxic pigments. The very same pigments that are used to make oil paint are used to make acrylic paint. The paint itself doesn’t give off any toxic fumes. It is only solvents that do .
This was really a very interesting conversation. I've been reading and watching so many acrylic vs oil paints and I've got to say this is one of the best.
I started my oil painting with the intention to use oil like it was acrylic. I had to improvise and assume what color theory was and experiment. having professors share their journey between acrylic and oil is like finding out someone is just as annoyed as you about another person.
Love this video, so informative. I will say that as an acrylic painter myself, acrylics mixed with slow drying medium are great to work with. I also use a water mister which stops the paint drying hard, so good for working on skies and clouds.
This was really awesome! I'm in my first semester of art school and paints have always scared me! I've been especially leery of oil painting. I absolutely loved how informative this was, and all the comparisons and contrasts between the two mediums. The professors also had great personalities that seemed to work really well together for this video. Thank you!
Great, thank you!! You might like my oil painting tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html and Alex's acrylic painting tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html -Prof Lieu
This has taught me so much. I’ve been painting acrylics for over five years as a hobby but I never realised that there was so much more to learn, like buying a paint retarder and cleaning brushes with water and SOAP. Wow thank you so much!
"Paint with oils in a well ventilated space" Me: -painted in he rroom, on the floor with closed windows and only an open door- "Dispose properly!" Me: threw Gamsol down the kitchen drain at one point I.... I'll just go slink away in shame now
Some of my brushes are 50 years old - one or two even older than that, because they were given to me by an older artist. I wash them in what you in the USA would call 'dish-soap', and what we in the UK would call washing-up liquid; or just with plain soap and lukewarm water. All you need to do is wipe the loose paint off with a kitchen towel - ie a thick paper towel. Soap and water does the rest. I don't use any solvent, for cleaning or for painting - so, no fumes; and I can paint at home in consequence. Incidentally - I think we all know what you mean about that horrible stage in a painting at which it looks just painful! You have to have enough faith in yourself to work beyond that stage: I conceive of it as the rescue operation stage.
Haha, whoops? We're so glad you liked it :) Feel free to check out this similar video about oil painting: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html You might enjoy it! - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
For someone who paints with both mediums, but has only been painting with oils for a year and acrylics for years, this was such an informative video about both mediums and the difference between them.
Happy to help and I hope you keep working at it! You might like our other painting tutorials: ru-vid.com/group/PLvt8_pMl6ywk7zc4BskYW33YEBno7tGph -Marc Stier, Art Prof Staff
I'm so happy that Artprof finally made this video, I've been waiting for professor Lieu to talk about this for so long, I learned a lot about Acrylics from this video as I usually use Oil paints so thank you Artprof!
You're so welcome! If you liked this video, you might also enjoy this acrylic tutorial as well: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
Clara drilling it into my head how important and helpful thumbnail sketches are is probably the most important thing I took away from pre college 5 years ago
As someone who wants to start painting and didn't know what to choose I think acrylic will fit me way more, i'm inpatient and I'm used to drawing, digital art and all of that where you don't wait a single bit, the opposite you try to use as many shortcuts as possible with the software to be faster xD
I started with oils in high school because the teacher knew it was the last year she'd have the budget for it. When I got to acrylics I kept being stingy with the amount I'd take out of the tube and have it dry up in seconds lol. Oils are my love though, they have a richness I appreciate but I admit i judged acrylic unfairly at first form the sheer frustration.
I think that every artist has their own preferences in terms of art media, and the important thing is that you gave it a shot! There’s more painting videos in this playlist: ru-vid.com/group/PLvt8_pMl6ywk7zc4BskYW33YEBno7tGph -Marc Stier, Art Prof Staff
Oil paints straight from the tube do not produce toxic vapours. They are merely pigment in plant based oil. If you use solvents as thinners such as turpentine or varsol (mineral spirits) then you will get toxic fumes and will need ventilation. Clean your brushes with oil; mineral or vegetable based and you don't need spirits to clean them. Keep them wet with oil and you don't have to continually wash them 🤓✌🏼
When I make a mistake with oils, I scrape them off. Problem solved. When I make a mistake with acrylics, I paint over it. Problem solved. When I make a mistake with watercolors... WHATEVER I DO IS JUST MAKING THINGS EVEN WORSE AND WORSE AND THE PAPER IS DISSOLVED.
Ye, but it’s cheap so have lots of opportunity to experiment! I also feel like it’s easier to blend, but shading and layering is hard lol. I watercolor and it’s very difficult. With oil paints and acrylic it feels so much more expensive and I’m like “THIS NEED TO BE PERFECT”and I feel like I do better when I just relax and doodle
We're glad it was helpful! Good luck painting :) If you liked this video, you might also enjoy this one: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
I just learned that you need to like actualy properly clean your brushes cuz in school(elementary) they told us not to rub them too much because they were shitty brushes and would fall apart lmao
Good point, if you want to see the results of our paintings, you can watch see them in part 2 of our oil painting tutorial ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YyzyeAZI9sI.html , and our acrylic tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CFULyTf-RzM.html -Prof Lieu
You are both so good. Your students should thank their lucky stars having you teach them. I truly enjoy watching your segments and learning from you both. 🦋👍🏻 (oh and kudos to the editing too. Excellent!!!)
I am a watercolor artist and I was watching your fish recipe yesterday and thought you have a good spirit without knowing you have an art channel and you are an art professor yourself!! I’m really glad I found this channel
Very informative! Well done you two. I just recently started painting with oil, I’ve only painted with acrylic up until now, I’m 54 years old. I LOVE oils! OMG. What a difference. I have so much to learn about oils.
Oils are amazing!!!! We have an oil painting tutorial you might like, part 1: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html and part 2: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YyzyeAZI9sI.html -Prof Lieu
One benefit I found in using oils is oils was easier to clean from my clothes. Oil is hard to remove from skin. Acrylic is easy to remove from skin but hard from clothes. You should use an apron though no matter what paint you use.
Thank you! Here's a tutorial on how to begin painting with oil if you are open to learning. We'd love to see what you create! :) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html -Lauryn, Art Prof Teaching Artist
You can listen to us prepare surfaces for painting and stretching canvases! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-zXXPvJPP6oY.html -Prof Lieu
I really enjoyed the video. I am a chemist and new to art and painting. I hope you find this interesting or useful. On the off chance it is not clear, oil paints do not dry in the normal sense of the word. That is, evaporation is not the primary process by which oil paint loses it softness and becomes durable. The oils in the paint are selected such that they have a reactive site (i.e., unsaturation in chemist-speak) and are referred to as “drying oils”. This site is subject to reaction with oxygen in the air that causes the oil molecules to link together and form a 3-D matrix and a change from viscous liquid to solid. Hence, oil paints “cure” rather than dry. These so-called drying oils may be formulated with trace amounts of certain metals that accelerate the curing process. The metal ion additives are referred to as “driers”. Note that under normal circumstances that the best ways to increase the cure rate are: 1) Place the work in a slightly warm environment 2) render the painted surface open the ambient air. 3) Store the painting where there is gently moving air. 4) Use trace metal additives to the paint. Hope you find the science interesting.
WOW, thank you so much for this very thorough explanation!!! As you can see from the comments here, there are infinite opinions on oil and acrylic painting, but hearing it from a chemistry point of view is so wonderful, LOVE IT! -Prof Lieu
Thank you for this explanation, I always wondered how oil can „dry“. Do you know if this reaction with oxygen creates toxic fumes? I always hear about the solvents used in oil painting being toxic but the paint itself not giving off toxic fumes. Is that true?
Good luck painting! We're happy to help :) If you want to learn more about oils, feel free to check out this tutorial: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dPw8J2G7cqI.html - Mia Rozear, Art Prof Staff
I’m new to acrylic but I too brought the cheap student grade (even cheaper than that) and was getting so frustrated that it didn’t work the way I wanted it to, I then got professional quality and it all made sense. It helps the paint to move better on the canvas and not dry out, become patchy too quickly.