4.80/5 (45 recenzii)

Showing 181–225 of 593 results

Landscapes

GREEN

$590

Oil Paintings

Daddy’s Princess

$150
Sold out

Le Thang

Lotus love

$620

Oil Paintings

Lazy river

$590

Oil Paintings

A sudden feeling

$450
Sold out

Nguyen Quang Quy

Country love

$460

Oil Paintings

Impressions of a time

$2,490

Art painting

Early autumn

$290

Nguyen Thuy Yen Chi

BLUE

$190

Nguyen Thuy Yen Chi

Golden Afternoon

$330
Sold out

Nguyen Thuy Yen Chi

Sun purple chrysanthemum

$390

Diep Hoang Thuan

New season

$480

Oil Paintings

POPPIES

$230

Oil Paintings

Pink Lotus Puff

$850

Oil Paintings

SUNFLOWER

$260

Oil Paintings

Red Lotus

$890

Oil Paintings

Routine

$190

Oil Paintings

Flower still life

$230

Oil Paintings

Dawn by the river

$230

Oil Paintings

Sunset at sea

$150

Bui Quoc Hien

Adventure

$390

Diep Hoang Thuan

Good Land Bird Perches

$590

Diep Hoang Thuan

Together #2

$490

Oil Paintings

Hamster mouse

$130

Oil Paintings

Malacca house

$190

Oil Paintings

Octopus cake 2am

$150

Oil Paintings

Forest guava

$130

Oil Paintings

Asset to save

$290

Oil Paintings

Still life

$290
Sold out

Art painting

Season changes

$260

What oils are used in oil paintings?

Unlike Tempera, acrylic, watercolor or gouache, which all dry by evaporation, oil paints dry by oxidation, that is, the oil reacts chemically with oxygen in the air and gradually gradually changes from liquid to gel and finally becomes hard.

What types of oils are used in oil paintings?

The most common oil used in oil painting is linseed oil because (unlike other vegetable oils like olive or canola) it dries by oxidation. Flaxseed oil isn't the only (or siccative) oil: safflower, poppy, or walnut oils can also be used, depending on brightness, drying time, and other effects required. of the painter. However, linseed oil tends to dry faster and, in the process, forms a more flexible film of paint that can be reworked more easily. Also note, pigments don't dry at the same rate: coal-black oil paints, for example, tend to dry more slowly while red/yellow soils harden much faster.

How is oil paint made?

Today, very few painters use oil paints in a manual concoction. They prefer oil paints from reputable and famous brands. Anyhow, the basic manufacturing process is relatively similar. The first is the grinding of pigments in the oil. The paste is thoroughly ground to disperse the colored particles throughout the mixture. Then thinner and perhaps an additional siccative (drying agent) is added.

What are the advantages of oil paint?

The main advantages of oil paint are flexibility and depth of color. They can be applied in a variety of ways, from thin enamels diluted with turpentine to dense impasto. Because it dries slowly, painters can keep painting for much longer than with other paints. This provides greater opportunities for blending and layering. Oil also allows artists to create a richer range of colors as well as a wide range of tonal transitions and shades. In fact, the oil color does not change significantly after drying, and can produce both opaque and transparent effects, as well as matte and glossy finishes. In the hands of master painters, they can create stunning effects of light and color and much greater realism with oil paint.