Saturday, 11 August 2018

Renaissance Acrylic Paintings Versus Oil Paintings

By George Ward


Painting can be fun if you have the right tools for work. For a novice, it may be a challenge deciding between oil and acrylics paintings. If at all you know your needs and your capabilities, choosing the medium should not be a problem. Here is a guide on what you think of in choosing between Renaissance acrylic paintings and oil paintings.

Historically, it was only possible to paint on wood, canvas, or frescos. Today, you can work on any surface thanks to acrylic. Therefore, if you want a versatile medium, then acrylic is the solution. It provides quality on different grounds as long as it is not glass. Oil allows you to work well with wood and primed canvas; hence, limiting your options.

Your speed of painting is also an essential factor. If at all you are a quick painter, you need a medium that dries fast enough to allow you to revise your work. Acrylic dries faster than oil; hence, good for a fast painter. Oil may be good for you in case you are slow and will not mind factoring in some time for priming the canvas.

The choice will also be determined by your preference between subtle blends and hard lines. For lovers of graphic composition, then acrylic works best for a clean outcome since it dries faster allowing for reworking. However, if it is about color blending, then oil comes in handy, but the only problem is that you have to take longer for it to dry.

If at all you are concerned about color shift, then you ought to be careful on the paint of choice. With acrylics, you can somehow be sure that your painting will look the same some years to come since it is made with high technology designs. On the other hand, oil paintings contain binder that makes the painting appear yellow with time. The polymer in acrylics prevents this, but the work may get darker as it dries when the white binder gets clearer.

Additionally, the thickness or thinness of your layers will tell you what exactly to pick. In case you prefer thick layers that are ready fast enough to allow for glazing, then acrylics are a better choice. This is because it dries faster. Nevertheless, you may use oil if at all you have sufficient time to wait for it to dry and apply the glaze. This may take some days.

When working from a small space or somewhere around children, you must use some safe paint. Acrylic contains no toxins and has no smell. Moreover, you can clean it with water easily. For oil, you must be careful with the bad fumes from its thinners and turpentine; hence, it is not good for small workspaces.

Of much essence in picking the right medium is time. When you have little time to work on your painting, then you will go for the paint for the sake of drying faster. If you can wait for days especially when working on thick paintings, you may go for oil, which takes time to dry. Consider your preferences.




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