I forgot to thank this group for the very simple,
but effective tip of using oil paints diluted with
turpentine for the initial sketch for a painting,
instead of using pencil.
MUCH better and cleaner, and easy to wipe off
mistakes with a rag at the early stages.
Much better than smearing all that graphite
around! Yeachh!
And the next best thing was the suggestion to
erase as much of the original pencil lines as possible,
leaving only a light outline of what you need to see.
This was best done with a kneaded eraser.
Again, thanks folks!
I'll be posting this new stuff soon hopefully!
Slick
Dr. Slick wrote:
--
Jeff Wilson
"And now these three remain; faith, hope and love.
But the greatest of these is love."
...... Seek harmony and balance in the mountains.
Find harmony and balance within.....
use turp to clean.
I would never use turpentine as a brush cleaner,
or as a 'substitute' for paint thinner, aka: mineral
spirits. In fact, as often stated here, I use
turpentine ONLY for dissolving damar crystals.
I use mineral spirits otherwise.
And if you want a really good 'cleaner' for
final cleanup, that won't gum, try one of the
brands of "waterless hand cleaner" sold in
automotive departments, and paint stores. I often
have a hard time getting all the polyurethane
varnish out of a brush using only mineral spirits,
but a final cleaning in the hand cleaner, followed
by warm water rinsing, leaves my expensive brushes as
good as new.
Well, to be technically correct, I've been using
Turpenoid, a petroleum distillate mixture, which is
supposedly good for either thinning oil paints or
cleaning them.
Slick