The process of making paint. An amazing paint factory in Japan. 👁 Kusakabe 株式会社クサカベ www.kusakabe-enogu.co.jp/ goo.gl/maps/8owy9xCNQK1w3QRr5 💌 Contact: processx2@gmail.com 📸 Copyright(C) 2023. Processx. all rights reserved.
I was thinking the opposite. The only one that looked anything like pure colour with any depth to it was the ultramarine blue. The rest appeared very flat and dull compared to the paint I use.
I would love to see how they *clean* all that equipment after the production run. It's absolutely spotless when they start, and then they run all of this thick intensely colored stuff through it; how do they get it spotless again afterwards?
Thank you for posting this video. I've watched a lot of videos on oil paint making factory process. Your video shows a lot more of this process. It's one of the best I've seen. Usually the ingredients are omitted from the video. I was happy to see it wasn't in your video. I've found in my own research that each pigment may require a different combination of ingredients and in amounts. Some metallic and inorganic pigments may require more wax or oil while some organic pigments may require less wax or oil in the recipe. It's fascinating to me as an artist. Although I've never tried this brand of oil paint, I would bet their recipes are much the same as other more widely recognized oil paint companies I've used.
Japanese Paint, Writing, colouring Industry is full of quality and discipline production. I was Surprised in my Turkey visit lots of Japanese pens paints etc. As there are European manufacturers but Turkey people preferring Japan brands and local brands. In Russia also local and Europe and some Asia brands but with those videos I did learn why Japan products selected in some countries. Totally quality and safety products. Well done 👏🏼. Hope more pens paints inks etc videos 👍👍
Beautifully portrayed. As a visual artist myself, I can appreciate fully the art of making the materials that we take for granted everyday in our studios. Cheers and TY for sharing.
I absolutely LOVE your channel! 🥰🙏. This one is full of beautiful colours, and the paint looks good enough to eat 😁, it reminds of the movie "Charlie and the chocolate factory". The memorising sounds of the machinery, as well as workers still being needed in the process is good to see. After watching your videos I don't take anything for granted anymore and appreciate the hard work and many steps taken to produce such simple & wonderful things. 🙏👌🤟🇦🇺
Great process video. I'd love to see how some of these places know that their raw materials are of good quality. From the oil to the pigment, it must be a huge undertaking.
the cost and instruments that measure what the chemical make up is. There are different grades of artists paint. The cheaper are less saturated, that is, have less pigment and more filler and may be made of lower quality pigments. An example is cadmium based colours. If they are true cadmium they are very expensive. They can also be toxic and are banned in some countries, so you can buy cadmium hues, which are the same colour but artificially made with a different chemical make up. They don't have the same depth and artistic quality as real cadmiums but again, it depends where you live and how much of a purist you are, as well as how much you can afford to pay for the paint.
When saying that this was a company making paint, I thought it was for house paint. But it was to slow and small quantities for house paint. Then I saw the tubes and then I knew it was oil paints for art. Pretty cool.
We don’t produce house paint using three roll mills. House paint is produced using a cowles blade to achieve both wetting out the pigment and the correct pigment particle size in a color concentrate which is the let back in the appropriate latex vehicle.
Colors are one of the beautiful blessings that Almighty Allah has given to people. Man cannot create color by himself. And without these colors, a person could not even imagine that such colors could exist. Thanks to the color vision of our eyes, we see colors in their own colors. All this is a manifestation of the infinite power and mercy of Almighty Allah. I had a great pleasure watching the people who are currently working as well. I thank them for their efforts. May Allah make it easy for everyone who works there. Japanese people are beautiful. I love Japanese people.
First I thought "how small scaleoperation" and how "thick the paint is". Then it took me 6 minutes to realize this is not for painting houses it is ofcourse to be bought by painters for painting art. This paint should cost some in the store.
Some metalic colours are created using coloured mica - not that hard to imitate gold. Some artists will work gold leaf into the painting rather than use a gold paint.
I wonder if using rubber spatulas would make it easier to transfer the paint to and from the various pans with out leaving any paint in the original pan?
I love this modern manufacturing technology so much! You say it's my grandmother when she was making the pie 40 years ago. Without measuring, she would add flour, water, salt, sugar, oil and others, and if she needed more, she would call me to bring two more spoons of flour, some sugar and water. This is how I saw the painting done here as well
They were actually weighing the ingredients into the pot. But the milling on the two roll mill is often done by feel before the actual testing is carried out.
3:55 This looks like a pressure vessel. Is the mixing perhaps done under vacuum to reduce the amount of air introduced by the process? Or is it maybe done under pressure?
My guess is vacuum. At 3:58 you can see that the guage mounted on the chamber goes from -76 to 0, implying that it is a vacuum gauge. Later, at 4:06, when pressure is being released, the guage's needle is all the way to the left, which would indicate that the vessel is under vacuum.
@@dcf8978 not sure about that. You can mix paint by hand by using a glass mill (basically a flat lump of glass with a handle in it) and plate, no vacuum required. You grind the pigment into the oil by grinding it between the mill and the glass plate for hours until the pigment is suspended in the oil. It's why no one except absolute purists would bother doing it because buying the materials in small quantities costs way more than buying in bulk so you're not saving money by doing it yourself. In this factory, those rollers did the milling job. I can't see why they would need a vacuum just to mix the paint with what looked like dough hooks unless perhaps it reduces the time required for milling.
Thanks, very nice video of the process. I would have loved to learn about what those materials were that went into making the colors but some things are a secret right?
Hardly. They are using blown linseed oil as the vehicle, stearic acid, a pigment dispersant which is the mystery “additive”. Most likely something from BYK, Tego or Solsperse. The Pigment is a Dayglo type fluorescent magenta which is a fluorescent magenta dye dispersed in a thermoplastic polyamide resin. The other white powders are most likely TiO2, along with a free radical scavenger (preservative) and some type of pigment extender that is used to lower the gloss and lower the cost of the pigment dispersion.
@@marchutton7640 Very nice to have a professional sharing their knowledge. Was there anything peculiar in this manufacturing process, or is everybody doing it more or less in the same way?
If it was, it explains why that red paint lacked any real depth and vibrancy. I might use it for underpainting but it would need a glaze of a transparent red to give it any depth. I thought that of most of the paints actually, except the ultramarine blue which looked fairly pure, but then that pigment is one of the cheaper ones.