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Goldfinch - first attempt at acrylic painting (Original Post) Ocelot II Apr 2023 OP
Very pretty! Nt spooky3 Apr 2023 #1
Thanks! Ocelot II Apr 2023 #7
I think it's stunning Docreed2003 Apr 2023 #2
Thanks! Ocelot II Apr 2023 #6
I've always hated working with acrylics. BigmanPigman Apr 2023 #3
I think I'll go back to oils. Ocelot II Apr 2023 #8
I like using glazes mixed with oil paints BigmanPigman Apr 2023 #9
The glowing quality of oil glazing was kind of invented by Van Eyck, Ocelot II Apr 2023 #10
I looked at Van Eyck and just couldn't figure out how BigmanPigman Apr 2023 #11
It's all those transparent layers. Holbein is another artist Ocelot II Apr 2023 #12
Nicely done! bif Apr 2023 #4
Quick drying is just one of the things I don't like. Ocelot II Apr 2023 #5

BigmanPigman

(51,590 posts)
3. I've always hated working with acrylics.
Mon Apr 10, 2023, 11:57 PM
Apr 2023

They dry too fast and you can't be flexible with a deadline of them drying before your work is satisfactory. All my friends in art school hated them too. We only used them when required to by our teachers (which was almost never required since the teachers knew too). They only really used them for Color classes to make color wheels, etc.

Ocelot II

(115,683 posts)
8. I think I'll go back to oils.
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 02:04 PM
Apr 2023

The way the acrylic paint goes on just doesn't work with the way I paint - except for the drying time, that painting would have gone a lot faster and with less frustration if I'd used oils.

BigmanPigman

(51,590 posts)
9. I like using glazes mixed with oil paints
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 05:27 PM
Apr 2023

on a medium toned background. You get a lot of control and the layers give it a special "glowing" quality to it. I had homework to use this technique so I copied a Vermeer and the Mona Lisa and they were very, very similar to the originals since the technique is so wonderful.

Usually I draw/render and use brush and ink for fashion illustrations.

https://leprince.com/blogs/about-art/a-guide-to-glazing-in-oil-painting-techniques-history-and-challenges#:~:text=Other%20Renaissance%20masters%2C%20such%20as,highly%20realistic%20and%20detailed%20works.

Ocelot II

(115,683 posts)
10. The glowing quality of oil glazing was kind of invented by Van Eyck,
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 05:36 PM
Apr 2023

and in 600 years nobody's ever been able to do it better. For a painting class I did a fake Caravaggio detail, starting with a verdacchio underpainting and doing the glazing thing. I didn't approach the original but it was a really useful exercise.

BigmanPigman

(51,590 posts)
11. I looked at Van Eyck and just couldn't figure out how
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 05:48 PM
Apr 2023

he made the details in his work so clear when I took Art History. Then when my Techniques class came a year later it all made sense. Caravaggio is a personal favorite of mine...fabulous light and dark.

Ocelot II

(115,683 posts)
12. It's all those transparent layers. Holbein is another artist
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 05:55 PM
Apr 2023

whose amazingly detailed paintings blow me away. Saw one up close once and I still don't know quite how he did it.

bif

(22,697 posts)
4. Nicely done!
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 01:06 PM
Apr 2023

I love acrylics. I enjoy the fact that they dry quickly since I'm rather impatient. You can use mediums to slow down the drying times.

Ocelot II

(115,683 posts)
5. Quick drying is just one of the things I don't like.
Tue Apr 11, 2023, 01:25 PM
Apr 2023

The paint dries before you can mix your colors so you end up with unusable dried-up blobs. If you get it on yourself or your clothes and it dries you can't get it off, ever. It's opaque but not quite opaque enough unless you slather it on thickly, and at the same time you can't do a proper glaze by watering it down to some level of transparency because it still dries too fast and won't go on smoothly, which is why it also sucks as a substitute for water color. If you have a style that uses bright colors and not a lot of picky detail I could see how it might work, but it doesn't work for me.

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