<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<rss xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:trackback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/trackback/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:pingback="http://madskills.com/public/xml/rss/module/pingback/" version="2.0">
  <channel>
    <title>The Artist's Magazine - Anatomy of Art Materials</title>
    <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/</link>
    <description>Matter of Materials</description>
    <copyright>F+W Publications, Inc.</copyright>
    <lastBuildDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2008 18:42:33 GMT</lastBuildDate>
    <generator>newtelligence dasBlog 1.8.5223.2</generator>
    <managingEditor>ben.thompson@fwpubs.com</managingEditor>
    <webMaster>ben.thompson@fwpubs.com</webMaster>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div align="left">I was passing by an office building under construction and suddenly
            an idea came to mind that relates to making works of art. When a building is under
            construction, do you think the architect and the construction company gather together
            to figure out the minimal amount of effort and poorest quality materials that will
            be needed to assemble a building? Construction firms could build a structure, with
            the thought that after they finish the project, someone else can be hired to fix the
            deficiencies in the quality of the materials used and the poor techniques they employed
            to assemble the components. Just get it to look right and hope it holds together long
            enough for the checks to clear the bank. Fortunately, a sense of integrity, reputation,
            compliance to building codes, as well as a healthy fear of legal action, govern the
            construction of most of the commercial buildings erected in the United States today.<br /><br />
            Why is it that many artists ignore the notion of integrity, reputation, and fear of
            legal action? I skipped the building codes because they don’t apply, but perhaps that
            would not be a bad idea.  Many art schools today impart no sense of the need
            for “building codes” for works of art. Some schools don’t even make it an academic
            challenge by confronting students with the exercise of creating works of art that
            appear to use materials with inherent vice but are really very sound and stable.  
            <br /><br />
            Suppose you were fixated on making an artistic statement where the focus of your work
            was the typical American hamburger and its potential ill effects on the health and
            well being of the population. A painted image of a hamburger just wouldn't be enough.
            You would want it to appear to be a real and tangible object that exudes the essence
            of hamburger on a bun with all the extras. The simple, short-term answer would be
            to obtain a real hamburger and mount it, as appropriate, to your artwork. The long-term
            outcome is easy to figure out. The fresh, glistening, juicy hamburger will, in short
            order, be reduced to a blue-green, furry biohazard. This could be your intention,
            but you are likely to encourage the wrath of anyone who has to deal with your artwork
            professionally——from the gallery director who will have to cope with the byproducts
            of the deterioration process to the hazmat team that will be called in at some point
            to deal with the new life form that has established itself on your artwork. Nobody
            will be happy. Either way, your artwork will be delivered to a “suitable” exhibition
            space if you find that a garbage dumpster is an appealing alternate art gallery. Unless
            you are as rich as Warren Buffett and/or have a valued reputation as an artist, nobody
            is going to put up with your deteriorating hamburger nonsense.<br /><br />
            Now let’s go back to something more realistic and equally applicable. Why should artists
            be afforded the luxury to make objects without thought as to their longevity, leaving
            the difficult task of maintaining the artist's intent to a future generation of conservators?
            Conservators will have enough gainful employment treating the fairly stable, natural
            deterioration of materials found in works of art, without having the challenge of
            holding together a totally ill-planned nightmare.<br /><br />
            As I often find now, it is all a matter of economics. Will a poorly made work of art
            be worth the money needed to keep it looking the way an artist intended? No standard
            answer exists. However, unless you, as an artist, have a devoted following, your “brilliant”
            idea to paint with dry pigment mixed with vegetable shortening may not make it to
            a museum wall, when a curator and acquisition committee looks at how much it will
            cost to preserve a painting that is currently “wet” and will NEVER dry.<br /><br /></div>
            <p>
            </p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a" />
      </body>
      <title>Some Thoughts on Making Art</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Some+Thoughts+On+Making+Art.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 10 Jun 2008 18:42:33 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div align="left"&gt;I was passing by an office building under construction and suddenly
         an idea came to mind that relates to making works of art. When a building is under
         construction, do you think the architect and the construction company gather together
         to figure out the minimal amount of effort and poorest quality materials that will
         be needed to assemble a building? Construction firms could build a structure, with
         the thought that after they finish the project, someone else can be hired to fix the
         deficiencies in the quality of the materials used and the poor techniques they employed
         to assemble the components. Just get it to look right and hope it holds together long
         enough for the checks to clear the bank. Fortunately, a sense of integrity, reputation,
         compliance to building codes, as well as a healthy fear of legal action, govern the
         construction of most of the commercial buildings erected in the United States today.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Why is it that many artists ignore the notion of integrity, reputation, and fear of
         legal action? I skipped the building codes because they don’t apply, but perhaps that
         would not be a bad idea.&amp;nbsp; Many art schools today impart no sense of the need
         for “building codes” for works of art. Some schools don’t even make it an academic
         challenge by confronting students with the exercise of creating works of art that
         appear to use materials with inherent vice but are really very sound and stable.&amp;nbsp; 
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Suppose you were fixated on making an artistic statement where the focus of your work
         was the typical American hamburger and its potential ill effects on the health and
         well being of the population. A painted image of a hamburger just wouldn't be enough.
         You would want it to appear to be a real and tangible object that exudes the essence
         of hamburger on a bun with all the extras. The simple, short-term answer would be
         to obtain a real hamburger and mount it, as appropriate, to your artwork. The long-term
         outcome is easy to figure out. The fresh, glistening, juicy hamburger will, in short
         order, be reduced to a blue-green, furry biohazard. This could be your intention,
         but you are likely to encourage the wrath of anyone who has to deal with your artwork
         professionally——from the gallery director who will have to cope with the byproducts
         of the deterioration process to the hazmat team that will be called in at some point
         to deal with the new life form that has established itself on your artwork. Nobody
         will be happy. Either way, your artwork will be delivered to a “suitable” exhibition
         space if you find that a garbage dumpster is an appealing alternate art gallery. Unless
         you are as rich as Warren Buffett and/or have a valued reputation as an artist, nobody
         is going to put up with your deteriorating hamburger nonsense.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Now let’s go back to something more realistic and equally applicable. Why should artists
         be afforded the luxury to make objects without thought as to their longevity, leaving
         the difficult task of maintaining the artist's intent to a future generation of conservators?
         Conservators will have enough gainful employment treating the fairly stable, natural
         deterioration of materials found in works of art, without having the challenge of
         holding together a totally ill-planned nightmare.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         As I often find now, it is all a matter of economics. Will a poorly made work of art
         be worth the money needed to keep it looking the way an artist intended? No standard
         answer exists. However, unless you, as an artist, have a devoted following, your “brilliant”
         idea to paint with dry pigment mixed with vegetable shortening may not make it to
         a museum wall, when a curator and acquisition committee looks at how much it will
         cost to preserve a painting that is currently “wet” and will NEVER dry.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;p&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,ec8faefb-f2f7-4510-9cf4-de9361a8905a.aspx</comments>
      <category>Archival standards;Paint ingredients</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div align="left">It seems I am always in the process of getting myself into projects
            that consume a huge amount of time. I am drawn to them like moths to a candle. It
            doesn't mean that I am not thinking about art and art materials. Those thoughts are
            always with me. It’s just a matter of sitting down and writing them out. Currently
            I'm trying to figure out how to use the combined 80 minutes that I sit on a commuter
            train each day of the workweek to get these thoughts out.  
            <br /><br />
            So let’s catch up on what is going on right now. Within the last year I became the
            chairman of the subcommittee of the American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM)
            D01.57 group on Artists’ Materials.This is the group that creates standards for art
            materials and whose claim to fame is the mandatory standard D2436 that is found on
            almost every art and craft material around. I even saw it recently on a kit for coloring
            Easter eggs! I will comment from time to time on relevant issues related to the important
            work this subcommittee performs. We are headed for a meeting in Reno, NV and the National
            Art Materials Trade Association show late in April.<br /><br />
            For those of you who are dedicated readers of <i>The Artist's Magazine</i>, I provide
            entries for the “Ask the Experts” column. Some days I really question that “Expert”
            word in the title. The more I learn about the art materials world, the more I realize
            that I have no clue as to what is happening. (Keep this a secret.  Don’t let
            my editor know about this!  Actually, all the editors involved with the writing
            I do work very hard to keep me looking good. My thanks go out to them.) The questions
            posed by <i>The Artist's Magazine</i>'s readers are challenging, especially one that
            I'll address shortly in an upcoming issue on the use of zinc in oil paints. That answer
            will spark some interesting discussions.<br /><br />
            That would be enough stuff to keep anyone busy but, as a glutton for punishment, I
            have the truly thankless job of serving as treasurer and board member of the Mid-Atlantic <i>Plein
            Air </i>Painters Association. It’s a great organization and the opportunities are
            only limited by the imagination and hard work that its committee coordinators can
            produce. I can only wonder what we might do if we had unlimited time to put toward
            running the organization.  
            <br /><br />
            I have had a passion for prints ever since I went to undergraduate and graduate school
            and had nearly free reign to open drawers of the print collections of the university
            art galleries that I volunteered for during my days as a student. Luscious velvety
            black mezzotints, the fine lines and subtle plate tones of drypoint, and engraved
            images were all intriguing. Right now I am pouring through articles, books and websites
            in the hopes of learning how to make some of these beautiful images. I am so serious
            that I even bought an etching press and nearly killed myself lugging it into my house.
            How could something so small weigh so much?  I have yet to pull a print but I
            might share one of my disasters with you in the future.<br /><br />
            That about brings you up to date. Spring is coming soon and the trees are showing
            their characteristic red tinge. Soon it will be both prime allergy and plein air painting
            season. I will be ready to charge outside as soon as I see the first robin in the
            yard.  
            <br /><br /><br /></div>
            <p>
            </p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538" />
      </body>
      <title>My Somewhat Secret Life</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/My+Somewhat+Secret+Life.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 27 Mar 2008 15:40:53 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div align="left"&gt;It seems I am always in the process of getting myself into projects
         that consume a huge amount of time. I am drawn to them like moths to a candle. It
         doesn't mean that I am not thinking about art and art materials. Those thoughts are
         always with me. It’s just a matter of sitting down and writing them out. Currently
         I'm trying to figure out how to use the combined 80 minutes that I sit on a commuter
         train each day of the workweek to get these thoughts out.&amp;nbsp; 
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         So let’s catch up on what is going on right now. Within the last year I became the
         chairman of the subcommittee of the American Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM)
         D01.57 group on Artists’ Materials.This is the group that creates standards for art
         materials and whose claim to fame is the mandatory standard D2436 that is found on
         almost every art and craft material around. I even saw it recently on a kit for coloring
         Easter eggs! I will comment from time to time on relevant issues related to the important
         work this subcommittee performs. We are headed for a meeting in Reno, NV and the National
         Art Materials Trade Association show late in April.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         For those of you who are dedicated readers of &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine&lt;/i&gt;, I provide
         entries for the “Ask the Experts” column. Some days I really question that “Expert”
         word in the title. The more I learn about the art materials world, the more I realize
         that I have no clue as to what is happening. (Keep this a secret.&amp;nbsp; Don’t let
         my editor know about this!&amp;nbsp; Actually, all the editors involved with the writing
         I do work very hard to keep me looking good. My thanks go out to them.) The questions
         posed by &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine&lt;/i&gt;'s readers are challenging, especially one that
         I'll address shortly in an upcoming issue on the use of zinc in oil paints. That answer
         will spark some interesting discussions.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         That would be enough stuff to keep anyone busy but, as a glutton for punishment, I
         have the truly thankless job of serving as treasurer and board member of the Mid-Atlantic &lt;i&gt;Plein
         Air &lt;/i&gt;Painters Association. It’s a great organization and the opportunities are
         only limited by the imagination and hard work that its committee coordinators can
         produce. I can only wonder what we might do if we had unlimited time to put toward
         running the organization.&amp;nbsp; 
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         I have had a passion for prints ever since I went to undergraduate and graduate school
         and had nearly free reign to open drawers of the print collections of the university
         art galleries that I volunteered for during my days as a student. Luscious velvety
         black mezzotints, the fine lines and subtle plate tones of drypoint, and engraved
         images were all intriguing. Right now I am pouring through articles, books and websites
         in the hopes of learning how to make some of these beautiful images. I am so serious
         that I even bought an etching press and nearly killed myself lugging it into my house.
         How could something so small weigh so much?&amp;nbsp; I have yet to pull a print but I
         might share one of my disasters with you in the future.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         That about brings you up to date. Spring is coming soon and the trees are showing
         their characteristic red tinge. Soon it will be both prime allergy and plein air painting
         season. I will be ready to charge outside as soon as I see the first robin in the
         yard.&amp;nbsp; 
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;p&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,a5022b99-c165-44e9-9fce-e35d903ee538.aspx</comments>
      <category>Archival standards;Paint ingredients</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af</wfw:commentRss>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div align="left">So, a lot of you took the title of this discussion, "Paints for
               a Desert Island," seriously. I meant it only as a reference to an old radio program;
               nevertheless, it made for an interesting theme. If I'd called this entry “Vacation
               in the Mountains” or “Journey to the Amazon,” would the palette have been different?
               My point is that I want you to think of a scenario where you can’t anticipate what
               subject matter you will paint but are restricted as to what tubes of colors you can
               bring along.<br /><br />
               I really like analogies to music when talking about paint because I want the discussion
               to be about feelings and perceptions—rather than numbers or concrete amounts. So here
               is another musical analogy. How many musicians would it take to make a group sound
               like a symphony orchestra?  Imagine you are seated in the audience with your
               back facing the stage but the conductor keeps calling in string, wind and brass and
               percussion players who join the group and pick up with the rest of those already playing
               a classical piece. You get to yell stop when you think it sounds like the volume and
               depth you expect from a symphony orchestra. How few or, looking at it another way,
               how many people do you need before the overall sound feels like a complete orchestra? 
               Music experts, please don’t scrutinize this too carefully. I realize that various
               symphonic pieces need multiple players to fulfill the parts written for a score, so
               a small number of players would not be able to provide all that is needed. However,
               you get the general idea.<br /><br />
               The same hold true with paints.<b>  How many colors would it take to assure that
               in nearly any situation you could have the right pigments to create anything that
               is required?</b><br /><br />
               I really liked the answers you gave. Many followed all the conventional rules even
               without conferring with each other, although the last few entries could have been
               influenced by reading those entries already posted. Most of you came up with the classical
               palette choices that artists have assembled for a long time. Purposefully or not,
               lots of you selected warm/cool primary palettes.<br /><br />
               Other observations:<br /><br />
               Some of you selected primary palettes of warm and cool, but I noticed that both blue
               colors listed were warm. Ultramarine and cobalt blue have lots of red reflectance,
               making them both warm colors. Selecting a cool blue like cerulean or phthalocyanine
               provides the counterpart to the warm hues of ultramarine or cobalt.<br /><br />
               I was interested in which yellows were selected. Many of you place a lot of emphasis
               on all the other primary colors but yellow. Perhaps that works for watercolorist,
               but lacking good warm and cool yellow colors in oil paints can be quite a handicap.
               The palette with quinacridone gold brought this issue of selecting a broad range of
               yellow colors to mind.<br /><br />
               I sensed that most of you don’t use the palettes you describe so using the colors
               you choose would be a new experience. Try them and see if they fulfill your wishes.<br /><br />
               Some of you cheated a bit and went over the 8 colors allowed. That’s fine. Our astute 
               <br />
               color police stationed at the airport will confiscate your extra choices.<br /><br /><i>Why do some of you apologize for using earth colors?  I</i> thought black
               would be annoying to most of you, but some focused on avoiding earth colors as though
               they were evil. Go ahead and paint the way you wish and make earth colors out of primary
               pigments. I suppose I am cheap, but I find it annoying to use expensive cadmium colors
               to make earth colors. So many earth colors are beautiful, transparent hues that can
               add so much to a painting.<br /><br />
               Food for Further Thought:  <b><i>Look at your palette and not only think about
               warm verses cool primaries, but examine the colors you might use to create a transparent
               versus opaque palette of primary colors.</i></b> It gets a bit complicated because
               you could wind up with warm and cool transparent yellows and warm and cool opaque
               yellows, etc. That would make up a palette of 12 primary colors alone with no secondary
               hues. However, think about how to play transparent off of opaque colors to achieve
               fantastic effects.<br /><br />
               One question was posed on <i>making a good transparent violet</i>. Several ways exist
               but the main thing is that both red and blue choices must be transparent to achieve
               this mixture. Try alizarin crimson with ultramarine blue or quinacridone red with
               phthalocyanine blue for a higher chroma violet. For variations experiment with other
               transparent organic red hues like perylene red or pyrrol red with a transparent blue
               to see if the hue is appropriate for your work.<br /><br />
               Finally, the first three entries will be receiving a one -year subscription to <i>The
               Artist’s Magazine</i>.  My choice for the 4th subscription goes to Dorothy Riley’s
               entry. This palette, while following the warm cool primary layout, boldly reaches
               into cadmium yellow deep and Prussian blue to expand the range of the palette. Mixing
               cadmium yellow deep with a citron (lemon) yellow can achieve a wide range of warm
               yellow hues.  
               <br /><br />
               Want to read more about artists' palettes?  Look for an upcoming article (April
               08) in <i>The Artist’s Magazine</i> called “Palettes of the Masters,”  where
               I'll discuss the palette choices of several artists who selected colors that provide
               us with a wonderful tool for learning about materials and techniques.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
              <p>
              </p>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af" />
      </body>
      <title>Paints for a Palette::Musicians for an Orchestra</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Paints+For+A+PaletteMusicians+For+An+Orchestra.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 Jan 2008 18:48:01 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div align="left"&gt;So, a lot of you took the title of this discussion, "Paints for
            a Desert Island," seriously. I meant it only as a reference to an old radio program;
            nevertheless, it made for an interesting theme. If I'd called this entry “Vacation
            in the Mountains” or “Journey to the Amazon,” would the palette have been different?
            My point is that I want you to think of a scenario where you can’t anticipate what
            subject matter you will paint but are restricted as to what tubes of colors you can
            bring along.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I really like analogies to music when talking about paint because I want the discussion
            to be about feelings and perceptions—rather than numbers or concrete amounts. So here
            is another musical analogy. How many musicians would it take to make a group sound
            like a symphony orchestra?&amp;nbsp; Imagine you are seated in the audience with your
            back facing the stage but the conductor keeps calling in string, wind and brass and
            percussion players who join the group and pick up with the rest of those already playing
            a classical piece. You get to yell stop when you think it sounds like the volume and
            depth you expect from a symphony orchestra. How few or, looking at it another way,
            how many people do you need before the overall sound feels like a complete orchestra?&amp;nbsp;
            Music experts, please don’t scrutinize this too carefully. I realize that various
            symphonic pieces need multiple players to fulfill the parts written for a score, so
            a small number of players would not be able to provide all that is needed. However,
            you get the general idea.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            The same hold true with paints.&lt;b&gt;&amp;nbsp; How many colors would it take to assure that
            in nearly any situation you could have the right pigments to create anything that
            is required?&lt;/b&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I really liked the answers you gave. Many followed all the conventional rules even
            without conferring with each other, although the last few entries could have been
            influenced by reading those entries already posted. Most of you came up with the classical
            palette choices that artists have assembled for a long time. Purposefully or not,
            lots of you selected warm/cool primary palettes.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Other observations:&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Some of you selected primary palettes of warm and cool, but I noticed that both blue
            colors listed were warm. Ultramarine and cobalt blue have lots of red reflectance,
            making them both warm colors. Selecting a cool blue like cerulean or phthalocyanine
            provides the counterpart to the warm hues of ultramarine or cobalt.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I was interested in which yellows were selected. Many of you place a lot of emphasis
            on all the other primary colors but yellow. Perhaps that works for watercolorist,
            but lacking good warm and cool yellow colors in oil paints can be quite a handicap.
            The palette with quinacridone gold brought this issue of selecting a broad range of
            yellow colors to mind.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I sensed that most of you don’t use the palettes you describe so using the colors
            you choose would be a new experience. Try them and see if they fulfill your wishes.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Some of you cheated a bit and went over the 8 colors allowed. That’s fine. Our astute 
            &lt;br&gt;
            color police stationed at the airport will confiscate your extra choices.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;i&gt;Why do some of you apologize for using earth colors?&amp;nbsp; I&lt;/i&gt; thought black
            would be annoying to most of you, but some focused on avoiding earth colors as though
            they were evil. Go ahead and paint the way you wish and make earth colors out of primary
            pigments. I suppose I am cheap, but I find it annoying to use expensive cadmium colors
            to make earth colors. So many earth colors are beautiful, transparent hues that can
            add so much to a painting.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Food for Further Thought:&amp;nbsp; &lt;b&gt;&lt;i&gt;Look at your palette and not only think about
            warm verses cool primaries, but examine the colors you might use to create a transparent
            versus opaque palette of primary colors.&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/b&gt; It gets a bit complicated because
            you could wind up with warm and cool transparent yellows and warm and cool opaque
            yellows, etc. That would make up a palette of 12 primary colors alone with no secondary
            hues. However, think about how to play transparent off of opaque colors to achieve
            fantastic effects.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            One question was posed on &lt;i&gt;making a good transparent violet&lt;/i&gt;. Several ways exist
            but the main thing is that both red and blue choices must be transparent to achieve
            this mixture. Try alizarin crimson with ultramarine blue or quinacridone red with
            phthalocyanine blue for a higher chroma violet. For variations experiment with other
            transparent organic red hues like perylene red or pyrrol red with a transparent blue
            to see if the hue is appropriate for your work.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Finally, the first three entries will be receiving a one -year subscription to &lt;i&gt;The
            Artist’s Magazine&lt;/i&gt;.&amp;nbsp; My choice for the 4th subscription goes to Dorothy Riley’s
            entry. This palette, while following the warm cool primary layout, boldly reaches
            into cadmium yellow deep and Prussian blue to expand the range of the palette. Mixing
            cadmium yellow deep with a citron (lemon) yellow can achieve a wide range of warm
            yellow hues.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Want to read more about artists' palettes?&amp;nbsp; Look for an upcoming article (April
            08) in &lt;i&gt;The Artist’s Magazine&lt;/i&gt; called “Palettes of the Masters,”&amp;nbsp; where
            I'll discuss the palette choices of several artists who selected colors that provide
            us with a wonderful tool for learning about materials and techniques.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;/div&gt;
         &lt;p&gt;
         &lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,7044a0e8-05c1-47d0-b254-cb2eb0ee53af.aspx</comments>
      <category>Paint ingredients;Palettes</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>14</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div align="left">I want to explore a theme that has been rattling around in the back
               of my mind for some time.  Years ago I listened to a public radio station in
               New York that had a program called Desert Island Disks. The premise was simple. A
               guest musician for the weekly program would be asked to select only eight pieces of
               music to take to a desert island. Which albums would he choose as the only things
               the guest artist would ever be able to listen to for as long as he lived? Yes, it
               is a bit overdramatic, but you get the point. Certainly, this exercise is about the
               choice made, but I find it intriguing to consider the scope of the music that had
               to be left behind.  
               <br /><br />
               What if we were to play this game with paints? Which ones would you take to a desolate
               location to be the only things you could paint with forever? Let’s limit the palette
               to 8 colors. That should be generous enough. As a bonus, black and white will not
               be counted as part of the eight pigments. To put it into modern day practical thinking,
               the airline taking you to this land without art materials stores is limiting your
               checked bag volume to 12.5 ounces of paint in tubes that do not exceed 1.25 ounces;
               hence, 10 tubes of paint. No substituting two other colors for the black and white.
               In fact, white will be mandatory.<br /><br />
               Limited palettes create discipline, and who could not use a bit more discipline in
               their lives? This exercise makes us think of what is really important about selecting
               a color. It makes us think about what colors we use as convenience mixtures, and which
               ones we cannot make by any other means.<br /><br />
               Thinking through this strategy from various perspectives, you could select a suitable
               yellow, red and blue pigment so that you will not have to bring the secondary colors
               of orange, violet and green.  That leaves you with 5 more color choices.<br /><br />
               For split primary devotees, the 3 most obvious choices would be the other yellow,
               red and blue colors to create the warm verses cool separation.  For those who
               do not paint with a split primary palette, the field is wide open.  
               <br /><br />
               An artist might start with yellow, red and blue hues that are transparent, followed
               by 3 opaque primary colors. Since a few of the blue hues we may choose tend to make
               weak greens, an obvious choice would be to select one secondary green to fortify this
               side of the palette. The 1 or 2 (if a secondary green is not chosen) remaining open
               choices, once the first round of decisions is made, require careful consideration.<br /><br />
               The color to select beyond the mandatory ones should be unique in their ability to
               extend the range of the hues that have already been selected. What colors cannot be
               made from the hues selected thus far? How difficult is it to mix some of the desired
               hues and select one or two convenience colors to make painting easier? If a maximum
               range is sought, an artist must become comfortable knowing exactly what colors are
               attainable with the 6 he first selected. Some artists find that mixing earth tones
               is a bore so they will supplement their palette with an ochre, umber or sienna. Others
               find some unique working property of a pigment that allows them to have a tremendous
               range of hues, using one or two well-planned selections.<br /><br /><u><b>In summary, here is the challenge that I would like you to ponder.</b></u> Select
               a palette of 8 colors,  with black and white having permanent status, that you
               would take on a trip that required you to limit your equipment. The environment will
               vary, so just imagine that all landscape possibilities will be presented for you to
               paint. Post your replies for all to see: which palette will supply the widest possible
               range of color mixing solutions, and justify your choices. Let’s see who comes up
               with the most unique solution. Similarities will abound, but as each artist approaches
               color mixing in a somewhat unique way, I believe that we can all learn from each other.
               I will post my choices in a later entry on this blog.<br /><br />
               Returning to the musical theme that I started with, selecting 8 colors for your palette
               is similar to finding a set of audio speakers with the greatest dynamic range. We
               don’t think of colors in that respect, but this is exactly the goal of this exercise.
               Find 8 paints that will create the greatest number of colors to suit the demands of
               any landscape painting. 
               <br /><br />
               I feel we are far better at predicting the limits of a color than knowing just how
               far a pigment will expand to produce a wide array of color combinations. It takes
               a bit of exploring to see just how much we can “squeeze” out of a color. In landscape
               painting we rarely exploit the highest chroma achievable with any color, since the
               natural world is somewhat muted and we mix paint to deliberately dull down colors. 
               <br /><br />
               I look forward to seeing your posts. And because you're no doubt in the midst of the
               holiday rush, I'm going to offer an incentive. The first three artists who post replies
               will receive a free one year's subscription to <i>The Artist's Magazine. </i>Once
               at least ten replies have been posted, I'll award another free one year's subscription
               to the most interesting argument for Eight Colors To Take To A Desert Island. So,
               what are you waiting for? 
               <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
              <p>
              </p>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e" />
      </body>
      <title>Paints for a Desert Island</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Paints+For+A+Desert+Island.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 13 Dec 2007 13:30:50 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div align="left"&gt;I want to explore a theme that has been rattling around in the back
            of my mind for some time.&amp;nbsp; Years ago I listened to a public radio station in
            New York that had a program called Desert Island Disks. The premise was simple. A
            guest musician for the weekly program would be asked to select only eight pieces of
            music to take to a desert island. Which albums would he choose as the only things
            the guest artist would ever be able to listen to for as long as he lived? Yes, it
            is a bit overdramatic, but you get the point. Certainly, this exercise is about the
            choice made, but I find it intriguing to consider the scope of the music that had
            to be left behind.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            What if we were to play this game with paints? Which ones would you take to a desolate
            location to be the only things you could paint with forever? Let’s limit the palette
            to 8 colors. That should be generous enough. As a bonus, black and white will not
            be counted as part of the eight pigments. To put it into modern day practical thinking,
            the airline taking you to this land without art materials stores is limiting your
            checked bag volume to 12.5 ounces of paint in tubes that do not exceed 1.25 ounces;
            hence, 10 tubes of paint. No substituting two other colors for the black and white.
            In fact, white will be mandatory.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Limited palettes create discipline, and who could not use a bit more discipline in
            their lives? This exercise makes us think of what is really important about selecting
            a color. It makes us think about what colors we use as convenience mixtures, and which
            ones we cannot make by any other means.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Thinking through this strategy from various perspectives, you could select a suitable
            yellow, red and blue pigment so that you will not have to bring the secondary colors
            of orange, violet and green.&amp;nbsp; That leaves you with 5 more color choices.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            For split primary devotees, the 3 most obvious choices would be the other yellow,
            red and blue colors to create the warm verses cool separation.&amp;nbsp; For those who
            do not paint with a split primary palette, the field is wide open.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            An artist might start with yellow, red and blue hues that are transparent, followed
            by 3 opaque primary colors. Since a few of the blue hues we may choose tend to make
            weak greens, an obvious choice would be to select one secondary green to fortify this
            side of the palette. The 1 or 2 (if a secondary green is not chosen) remaining open
            choices, once the first round of decisions is made, require careful consideration.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            The color to select beyond the mandatory ones should be unique in their ability to
            extend the range of the hues that have already been selected. What colors cannot be
            made from the hues selected thus far? How difficult is it to mix some of the desired
            hues and select one or two convenience colors to make painting easier? If a maximum
            range is sought, an artist must become comfortable knowing exactly what colors are
            attainable with the 6 he first selected. Some artists find that mixing earth tones
            is a bore so they will supplement their palette with an ochre, umber or sienna. Others
            find some unique working property of a pigment that allows them to have a tremendous
            range of hues, using one or two well-planned selections.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;u&gt;&lt;b&gt;In summary, here is the challenge that I would like you to ponder.&lt;/b&gt;&lt;/u&gt; Select
            a palette of 8 colors,&amp;nbsp; with black and white having permanent status, that you
            would take on a trip that required you to limit your equipment. The environment will
            vary, so just imagine that all landscape possibilities will be presented for you to
            paint. Post your replies for all to see: which palette will supply the widest possible
            range of color mixing solutions, and justify your choices. Let’s see who comes up
            with the most unique solution. Similarities will abound, but as each artist approaches
            color mixing in a somewhat unique way, I believe that we can all learn from each other.
            I will post my choices in a later entry on this blog.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Returning to the musical theme that I started with, selecting 8 colors for your palette
            is similar to finding a set of audio speakers with the greatest dynamic range. We
            don’t think of colors in that respect, but this is exactly the goal of this exercise.
            Find 8 paints that will create the greatest number of colors to suit the demands of
            any landscape painting. 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I feel we are far better at predicting the limits of a color than knowing just how
            far a pigment will expand to produce a wide array of color combinations. It takes
            a bit of exploring to see just how much we can “squeeze” out of a color. In landscape
            painting we rarely exploit the highest chroma achievable with any color, since the
            natural world is somewhat muted and we mix paint to deliberately dull down colors. 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I look forward to seeing your posts. And because you're no doubt in the midst of the
            holiday rush, I'm going to offer an incentive. The first three artists who post replies
            will receive a free one year's subscription to &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine. &lt;/i&gt;Once
            at least ten replies have been posted, I'll award another free one year's subscription
            to the most interesting argument for Eight Colors To Take To A Desert Island. So,
            what are you waiting for? 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;/div&gt;
         &lt;p&gt;
         &lt;/p&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,69aa8883-0cfc-4dd1-94fd-0635dd5c062e.aspx</comments>
      <category>Palettes</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div align="left">In the October issue of <i>The Artist's Magazine,</i> a letter from
            James Caldwell presented an amateur's procedure, derived from an old set of <i>Encyclopedia
            Brittanica</i>, for repairing a tear in a painting. Mr. Caldwell was responding to
            an Ask the Experts column I'd written for the March 07 issue; in answering a question
            about repairing an oil painting that had been cut, I'd advised the reader to consult
            a professional conservator. The editor of <i>The Artist's Magazine</i> asked me to
            respond to Mr. Caldwell; here is my response (a slightly shorter version will be printed
            in the December issue of <i>The Artist's Magazine</i>).<br /><br />
            I am reminded of the attention-catching idea used to advertise a popular chain of
            motels that touts the main character in the commercial as one who has received a jolt
            of expert knowledge because he/she experienced an overnight stay in one of the advertiser’s
            facilities. In the end the obvious is revealed and the viewer can laugh at the creative
            effort of the author of the commercial.<br /><br />
            Unfortunately, this is not the case with the advice given on the conservation of works
            of art as described in the letter to the editor. I shudder to think of all of the
            unfortunate readers who might be foolish enough to embark on following this advice
            and ruin a painting that could have been repaired by skilled hands.<br /><br />
            This “one size fits all” form of advice ignores the fact that problems with works
            of art are filled with variables that influence the method of treatment selected.
            For example, a painting with heavy <i>impasto</i> is treated one way while a canvas
            with a smooth surface is handled another way. Obviously, accidentally torn canvas
            will not take place in a uniform way and the method used to attack each type of puncture
            and cut made to a painting can be different. The position of the tear, the frayed
            ends of the canvas, the loss of paint, etc., all play a part in formulating a treatment
            plan. Specialized knowledge and experience is needed to sort out the important factors
            and customize the treatment based on the variables encountered.<br /><br />
            The central point that is most disturbing about this letter on repairing a tear is
            the assumption that little to no knowledge of conservation is required in order to
            make complex repairs to works of art.  This is an antiquated idea dating back
            to when conservation was simply an artist who repaired works of art by means that
            would make modern conservators cringe. Today, conservators start their careers with
            an undergraduate degree in art history and studio art with a concentration in chemistry.
            Then they spend a year or two of apprentice training with an experienced conservator
            learning about the methods and materials used to treat works of art. After that, they
            apply to graduate programs in conservation where they spend two years studying conservation.
            This is followed by a one-year internship at a museum or other institution where they
            are assigned practical treatments that perfect their skills. Most conservators go
            on to spend 3 years in post-graduate study via fellowship opportunities at museums.<br /><br />
            It is absurd to think that an encyclopedia article can replace 5 to 7 years of intense
            training followed by a career of work experience. This is especially frustrating when
            the advice is filled with errors.  For those curious to know, beeswax alone is
            not the answer to repairing a tear. At best, the repair will undo itself shortly and,
            at worst, the patch will show through. As a bonus, if enough beeswax is applied to
            make the patch firmly stick to the back of the painting, the heat applied can allow
            the wax to seep through the tear and disfigure the front of the painting, as well
            as adhere the painting to the table used for the treatment. If this home repair is
            attempted, an artist may face the headache and expense of both repair of the original
            tear and the removal of wax from the surface of the painting. The lesson that should
            be learned is do not work beyond your level of skill and understanding. Things can
            go horribly wrong when following generalized instructions, especially if the instructions
            are wrong from the start.<br /><br />
            Reading the formula for amateur repairing of tear in oil paintings begs the analogy
            to the medical world. What if your doctor told you that you needed a fairly simple
            operation but that the procedure would cost you a lot of money? Ignoring the academic
            training and experience of a skilled surgeon, if you could obtain instructions for
            the operation from a surgical textbook, would you ask a family member who was “good
            with their hands” to perform the surgery to save the cost of the treatment? 
            The same holds true for conservation of works of art.  Do-it-yourself surgery
            and conservation both come to the same bad end.<br /><br /></div>
            <p>
            </p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e" />
      </body>
      <title>Setting the Record Straight on Repairing a Painting</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Setting+The+Record+Straight+On+Repairing+A+Painting.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 21 Sep 2007 14:59:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div align="left"&gt;In the October issue of &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine,&lt;/i&gt; a letter from
         James Caldwell presented an amateur's procedure, derived from an old set of &lt;i&gt;Encyclopedia
         Brittanica&lt;/i&gt;, for repairing a tear in a painting. Mr. Caldwell was responding to
         an Ask the Experts column I'd written for the March 07 issue; in answering a question
         about repairing an oil painting that had been cut, I'd advised the reader to consult
         a professional conservator. The editor of &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine&lt;/i&gt; asked me to
         respond to Mr. Caldwell; here is my response (a slightly shorter version will be printed
         in the December issue of &lt;i&gt;The Artist's Magazine&lt;/i&gt;).&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         I am reminded of the attention-catching idea used to advertise a popular chain of
         motels that touts the main character in the commercial as one who has received a jolt
         of expert knowledge because he/she experienced an overnight stay in one of the advertiser’s
         facilities. In the end the obvious is revealed and the viewer can laugh at the creative
         effort of the author of the commercial.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Unfortunately, this is not the case with the advice given on the conservation of works
         of art as described in the letter to the editor. I shudder to think of all of the
         unfortunate readers who might be foolish enough to embark on following this advice
         and ruin a painting that could have been repaired by skilled hands.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         This “one size fits all” form of advice ignores the fact that problems with works
         of art are filled with variables that influence the method of treatment selected.
         For example, a painting with heavy &lt;i&gt;impasto&lt;/i&gt; is treated one way while a canvas
         with a smooth surface is handled another way. Obviously, accidentally torn canvas
         will not take place in a uniform way and the method used to attack each type of puncture
         and cut made to a painting can be different. The position of the tear, the frayed
         ends of the canvas, the loss of paint, etc., all play a part in formulating a treatment
         plan. Specialized knowledge and experience is needed to sort out the important factors
         and customize the treatment based on the variables encountered.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         The central point that is most disturbing about this letter on repairing a tear is
         the assumption that little to no knowledge of conservation is required in order to
         make complex repairs to works of art.&amp;nbsp; This is an antiquated idea dating back
         to when conservation was simply an artist who repaired works of art by means that
         would make modern conservators cringe. Today, conservators start their careers with
         an undergraduate degree in art history and studio art with a concentration in chemistry.
         Then they spend a year or two of apprentice training with an experienced conservator
         learning about the methods and materials used to treat works of art. After that, they
         apply to graduate programs in conservation where they spend two years studying conservation.
         This is followed by a one-year internship at a museum or other institution where they
         are assigned practical treatments that perfect their skills. Most conservators go
         on to spend 3 years in post-graduate study via fellowship opportunities at museums.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         It is absurd to think that an encyclopedia article can replace 5 to 7 years of intense
         training followed by a career of work experience. This is especially frustrating when
         the advice is filled with errors.&amp;nbsp; For those curious to know, beeswax alone is
         not the answer to repairing a tear. At best, the repair will undo itself shortly and,
         at worst, the patch will show through. As a bonus, if enough beeswax is applied to
         make the patch firmly stick to the back of the painting, the heat applied can allow
         the wax to seep through the tear and disfigure the front of the painting, as well
         as adhere the painting to the table used for the treatment. If this home repair is
         attempted, an artist may face the headache and expense of both repair of the original
         tear and the removal of wax from the surface of the painting. The lesson that should
         be learned is do not work beyond your level of skill and understanding. Things can
         go horribly wrong when following generalized instructions, especially if the instructions
         are wrong from the start.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Reading the formula for amateur repairing of tear in oil paintings begs the analogy
         to the medical world. What if your doctor told you that you needed a fairly simple
         operation but that the procedure would cost you a lot of money? Ignoring the academic
         training and experience of a skilled surgeon, if you could obtain instructions for
         the operation from a surgical textbook, would you ask a family member who was “good
         with their hands” to perform the surgery to save the cost of the treatment?&amp;nbsp;
         The same holds true for conservation of works of art.&amp;nbsp; Do-it-yourself surgery
         and conservation both come to the same bad end.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;p&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,2b114a53-f8f5-4dfa-a60b-8d5c2da9029e.aspx</comments>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div align="left">Part of my absence in July has been my attention to many projects
            at work.  Plans for a series of lectures and a demonstration in October at the <a href="http://www.scad.edu">Savannah
            College of Art and Design </a>have taken up large parts of my workday. Another exciting
            opportunity to contribute to the art world has developed over the last month.<br /><br />
            Mark Gottsegen has become more involved in his venture to provide lectures and educational
            opportunity for the art community through his organization <a href="http://www.amien.org">AMIEN</a>;
            he asked me to take over his previous position as Chair of the American Society for
            Testing and Materials for Artists’ Materials (<a href="http://www.astm.org">ASTM</a>).<br /><br />
            This will be a great personal challenge for me. In recent years, participation by
            manufacturer members has been slipping. While this may be a part of a natural cycle
            of interest in ASTM as the Artists’ Materials group moves from creating standards
            for some of the high visibility, large volume art materials to the smaller-revenue
            generators in a manufacturer’s product line. Regardless, a lot of work will need to
            be done to bring back some of the old familiar participants and attract a new generation
            of enthusiastic manufacturers. Exciting new products are coming into the marketplace,
            and both the consumer and manufacturer stand to benefit from participation in ASTM.<br /><br />
            Education of the public is lacking. Many artists I contact do not know the work of
            ASTM. Others see it as “that group that does the health and safety thing.”  This
            “health and safety thing” is more commonly referred to in ASTM parlance as D4236. 
            This standard was a major undertaking by both ASTM and the Congress of the United
            States when they decided that art materials needed to have some point of official
            contact so that— if by some reason an art material was ingested or came into accidental
            contact with sensitive parts of the human body—a source of authority on the composition
            of the product could communicate with health care professionals to provide vital information
            on the composition and toxicity of the material in question. Other standards familiar
            to artists relate to the lightfastness of art materials. ASTM has provided manufacturers
            with a forum to come together to evaluate the durability of pigments. While many pigments
            remain unchanged when exposed to light over long periods of time, other pigments fade
            and pose problems for the artist. ASTM provided the means to test and evaluate the
            major pigments used for making art materials, and ASTM came up with a rating system
            that’s easy for an artist to understand.<br /><br />
            My task, and the task of those who wish to help, will be to educate artists as to
            the importance of ASTM and how their involvement as smart consumers can influence
            the art materials industry. If the public desired new standards, ASTM could provide
            them.  This would forge a partnership—between the consumer who wants quality
            art materials and the manufacturer who could provide them.  In my time as an
            observer of the art materials industry, I’ve impressed overall with the genuine care
            and concern that manufacturers have toward their customers. I believe they want to
            sell good materials because it makes good business sense, and it’s the right thing
            to do.  Many manufacturers are artists as well; they accordingly feel a sense
            of responsibility to produce good quality art materials.  
            <br /><br /></div>
            <p>
            </p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002" />
      </body>
      <title>On ASTM</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/On+ASTM.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 2007 19:31:16 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div align="left"&gt;Part of my absence in July has been my attention to many projects
         at work.&amp;nbsp; Plans for a series of lectures and a demonstration in October at the &lt;a href="http://www.scad.edu"&gt;Savannah
         College of Art and Design &lt;/a&gt;have taken up large parts of my workday. Another exciting
         opportunity to contribute to the art world has developed over the last month.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Mark Gottsegen has become more involved in his venture to provide lectures and educational
         opportunity for the art community through his organization &lt;a href="http://www.amien.org"&gt;AMIEN&lt;/a&gt;;
         he asked me to take over his previous position as Chair of the American Society for
         Testing and Materials for Artists’ Materials (&lt;a href="http://www.astm.org"&gt;ASTM&lt;/a&gt;).&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         This will be a great personal challenge for me. In recent years, participation by
         manufacturer members has been slipping. While this may be a part of a natural cycle
         of interest in ASTM as the Artists’ Materials group moves from creating standards
         for some of the high visibility, large volume art materials to the smaller-revenue
         generators in a manufacturer’s product line. Regardless, a lot of work will need to
         be done to bring back some of the old familiar participants and attract a new generation
         of enthusiastic manufacturers. Exciting new products are coming into the marketplace,
         and both the consumer and manufacturer stand to benefit from participation in ASTM.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Education of the public is lacking. Many artists I contact do not know the work of
         ASTM. Others see it as “that group that does the health and safety thing.”&amp;nbsp; This
         “health and safety thing” is more commonly referred to in ASTM parlance as D4236.&amp;nbsp;
         This standard was a major undertaking by both ASTM and the Congress of the United
         States when they decided that art materials needed to have some point of official
         contact so that— if by some reason an art material was ingested or came into accidental
         contact with sensitive parts of the human body—a source of authority on the composition
         of the product could communicate with health care professionals to provide vital information
         on the composition and toxicity of the material in question. Other standards familiar
         to artists relate to the lightfastness of art materials. ASTM has provided manufacturers
         with a forum to come together to evaluate the durability of pigments. While many pigments
         remain unchanged when exposed to light over long periods of time, other pigments fade
         and pose problems for the artist. ASTM provided the means to test and evaluate the
         major pigments used for making art materials, and ASTM came up with a rating system
         that’s easy for an artist to understand.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         My task, and the task of those who wish to help, will be to educate artists as to
         the importance of ASTM and how their involvement as smart consumers can influence
         the art materials industry. If the public desired new standards, ASTM could provide
         them.&amp;nbsp; This would forge a partnership—between the consumer who wants quality
         art materials and the manufacturer who could provide them.&amp;nbsp; In my time as an
         observer of the art materials industry, I’ve impressed overall with the genuine care
         and concern that manufacturers have toward their customers. I believe they want to
         sell good materials because it makes good business sense, and it’s the right thing
         to do.&amp;nbsp; Many manufacturers are artists as well; they accordingly feel a sense
         of responsibility to produce good quality art materials.&amp;nbsp; 
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;p&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,3e476613-f59c-4c66-a9ab-7e346e63b002.aspx</comments>
      <category>Archival standards;Lightfastness</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec</wfw:commentRss>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div align="left">
                <img src="/content/binary/Illustration7.jpg" align="left" border="0" />I’m
               continuing my experimentation with selecting a palette of colors that have the fewest
               hues and the widest range. I regularly employ a spectrophotometer that measures the
               relative intensities of light in different parts of a spectrum, but all the color
               measuring in the world will not substitute for actual mixing. I can tell you about
               the subtle bias of a color and how it leans toward warm or cool, but for all practical
               purposes, mixing is still the only way to know how any paint will behave when combined
               with other hues.  Spectral measurements verify and will provide an extension
               of what the eye can see by revealing the amount of reflectance at regularly spaced
               intervals over the visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum. While telling me
               a lot, it still doesn’t provide enough data for me to select an ideal palette.<br /><br />
               The set I selected this time was muted primaries supplemented by high chroma colors
               that extend the range of hues when the muted primaries run to the limit of chroma
               that they can deliver. My first experiment was with cadmium yellow deep, cadmium yellow,
               ultramarine blue and iron oxide red. (See the Color Wheel Diagram explanation in a
               separate blog entry.) Regarding secondary color mixtures, this palette makes nice
               bright orange and red-orange hues, very low chroma greens and muddy purples. Iron
               oxide red is a very useful color but is no substitute for cadmium red. Iron oxide
               red is just a muted form of an earthy orange. Mixing red oxide with yellow provides
               lots of orange hues.  Combining red oxide with blue activates the color complement
               rule so that a lovely group of warm or cool grays is achievable. These grays are fantastic—well
               worth the effort in keeping iron oxide red as part of the palette. Finally, ultramarine
               blue mixed with cadmium yellow provides a very low chroma green, much like mixtures
               of cadmium yellow and black.  That is when I thought of incorporating both cadmium
               red to help boost the range of the warm yellow and orange hues as well as phthalocyanine
               green to increase the intensity of green hues. I’m happy to say that the addition
               of the two worked rather well. All phthalocyanine colors are very strong. Combining
               phthalo green with the cadmium yellow/ultramarine blue boosts the chroma of the yellow/blue
               mixture.  Conversely, the muted green mixture softens the harshness of straight
               phthalocyanine green, thus making it an ideal color for a variety of landscape situations.
               Adding yellow, orange or blue warmed and cooled the green mixture very nicely. The
               addition of cadmium red provided a respectable violet, since iron oxide red and ultramarine
               blue made a weak purple. Adding cadmium red also expanded the range of orange hues
               (when mixed with cadmium yellow). I suppose I could drop the cadmium yellow deep and
               settle for mixed orange hues. The color is fairly redundant, if the proper selection
               of warm primaries is determined.  
               <br /><br />
               I’ll use this palette on a few paintings before I decide to settle down and learn
               its intricacies. I will miss my earth colors, but I can hold them to the side and
               introduce them as guest colors when needed. I will relish the wide range of grays
               that can be made with ultramarine blue and iron oxide red. Next time, I’ll discuss
               a variation of this palette.<br /><br /><br /></div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec" />
      </body>
      <title>Color Compromises</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Color+Compromises.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 27 Jun 2007 17:10:21 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div align="left"&gt;&lt;img src="/content/binary/Illustration7.jpg" align="left" border="0"&gt;I’m
            continuing my experimentation with selecting a palette of colors that have the fewest
            hues and the widest range. I regularly employ a spectrophotometer that measures the
            relative intensities of light in different parts of a spectrum, but all the color
            measuring in the world will not substitute for actual mixing. I can tell you about
            the subtle bias of a color and how it leans toward warm or cool, but for all practical
            purposes, mixing is still the only way to know how any paint will behave when combined
            with other hues.&amp;nbsp; Spectral measurements verify and will provide an extension
            of what the eye can see by revealing the amount of reflectance at regularly spaced
            intervals over the visible range of the electromagnetic spectrum. While telling me
            a lot, it still doesn’t provide enough data for me to select an ideal palette.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            The set I selected this time was muted primaries supplemented by high chroma colors
            that extend the range of hues when the muted primaries run to the limit of chroma
            that they can deliver. My first experiment was with cadmium yellow deep, cadmium yellow,
            ultramarine blue and iron oxide red. (See the Color Wheel Diagram explanation in a
            separate blog entry.) Regarding secondary color mixtures, this palette makes nice
            bright orange and red-orange hues, very low chroma greens and muddy purples. Iron
            oxide red is a very useful color but is no substitute for cadmium red. Iron oxide
            red is just a muted form of an earthy orange. Mixing red oxide with yellow provides
            lots of orange hues.&amp;nbsp; Combining red oxide with blue activates the color complement
            rule so that a lovely group of warm or cool grays is achievable. These grays are fantastic—well
            worth the effort in keeping iron oxide red as part of the palette. Finally, ultramarine
            blue mixed with cadmium yellow provides a very low chroma green, much like mixtures
            of cadmium yellow and black.&amp;nbsp; That is when I thought of incorporating both cadmium
            red to help boost the range of the warm yellow and orange hues as well as phthalocyanine
            green to increase the intensity of green hues. I’m happy to say that the addition
            of the two worked rather well. All phthalocyanine colors are very strong. Combining
            phthalo green with the cadmium yellow/ultramarine blue boosts the chroma of the yellow/blue
            mixture.&amp;nbsp; Conversely, the muted green mixture softens the harshness of straight
            phthalocyanine green, thus making it an ideal color for a variety of landscape situations.
            Adding yellow, orange or blue warmed and cooled the green mixture very nicely. The
            addition of cadmium red provided a respectable violet, since iron oxide red and ultramarine
            blue made a weak purple. Adding cadmium red also expanded the range of orange hues
            (when mixed with cadmium yellow). I suppose I could drop the cadmium yellow deep and
            settle for mixed orange hues. The color is fairly redundant, if the proper selection
            of warm primaries is determined.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I’ll use this palette on a few paintings before I decide to settle down and learn
            its intricacies. I will miss my earth colors, but I can hold them to the side and
            introduce them as guest colors when needed. I will relish the wide range of grays
            that can be made with ultramarine blue and iron oxide red. Next time, I’ll discuss
            a variation of this palette.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,a39f6fa3-c6b0-47f9-aef1-2c7addaf70ec.aspx</comments>
      <category>Palettes</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div align="left">I've come to realize that for me, golf and plein air painting have
            a symbiotic relationship. A soft-pack golf bag made to take clubs on airplanes serves
            as a suitable container for my clubs, as well as a tripod, hardboard panels and assorted
            other items needed for <i>plein air </i>painting. It creates the heaviest set of golf
            clubs checked onto a flight, but I figure if I don’t exceed my 50 lbs. limit, it should
            be fine. Since I don’t take a full set of drivers and wedges on trips, the initial
            weight of my set of clubs is less than that carried by a typical player. For this
            trip, my total bag weight was 39 lbs. along with my panels and tripod.<br />
             <br />
            So while golfing and painting during a recent vacation in California, I got a chance
            to experiment with a limited palette that I’ve been anxious to try. (No, I did not
            golf and paint at the same time. This combination slows down the game too much and
            really upsets the course officials.)  I must credit this palette of colors to
            Scott Gellatly, Technical Support Representative at Gamblin Artists Colors Co (<a href="http://">http://www.scottgellatly.com/</a>).
            His paintings are amazing. While the palette I’m about to describe isn’t his exclusive
            palette, Gellatly and I discussed it as an alternate limited palette during a past
            visit he made to Washington.<br /><br />
            It’s a fairly simple three-color primary palette composed of Indian Yellow, Quinacridone
            Violet and Prussian Blue. (You can substitute Phthalocyanine Blue for Prussian Blue
            without any drastic modifications.) Each color alone and the combination of colors
            to create secondary hues provide a fairly muted palette. Each of the primary colors
            is somewhat low in chroma and value. Adding a bit of white helps to bring out the
            full extent of their character. I liked the range of greens made with Prussian Blue
            and Indian Yellow. The violets are fine made of varying combinations of magenta and
            blue. Orange hues are fiery and a good start for making earthy browns when mixed with
            a bit of blue and black. Adding white to the secondary green mixture doesn’t create
            acceptable green hues for landscape painting. Titanium white turns mixed greens into
            pale, minty hues that are not within a range I like for landscape foliage. Interestingly,
            Indian Yellow combined with titanium white makes the yellow appear to be sullied with
            a blue grey cast. This is one case where the cool bluishness of titanium dioxide works
            against the combination of yellow pigments used in Indian Yellow. This effect is partly
            due to Indian Yellow being transparent and susceptible to the overpowering influence
            of a strong, opaque, cool pigment like titanium white. This mixture might look better
            with a less powerful, semi-transparent mixing white. As I said at the start, the overall
            palette is muted so when I need to achieve high chroma colors akin to permanent green
            light, cadmium yellow medium or cadmium red, I really need to add those to the palette
            to achieve a broader range. I don’t mind doing that, since the need for opaque pigments
            to round out this palette is welcome. The missing component is an opaque blue. Cerulean
            does not really function for me as an ideal opaque blue. It’s intriguing that a fairly
            neutral or cool opaque blue has never been synthesized.<br /><br />
            Regardless of its few shortcomings, I am anxious to put this palette through a real
            challenge and take it outside for a <i>plein air</i> session.  Perhaps I will
            post the completed painting. Do you have a favorite simple, minimal palette of colors? 
            Please share them with me. I always find it interesting to discover what colors an
            artist is using.<br /><br /><br /><br /></div>
            <p>
            </p>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd" />
      </body>
      <title>Plein Air Painting and Golf</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Plein+Air+Painting+And+Golf.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Mon, 11 Jun 2007 18:41:57 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div align="left"&gt;I've come to realize that for me, golf and plein air painting have
         a symbiotic relationship. A soft-pack golf bag made to take clubs on airplanes serves
         as a suitable container for my clubs, as well as a tripod, hardboard panels and assorted
         other items needed for &lt;i&gt;plein air &lt;/i&gt;painting. It creates the heaviest set of golf
         clubs checked onto a flight, but I figure if I don’t exceed my 50 lbs. limit, it should
         be fine. Since I don’t take a full set of drivers and wedges on trips, the initial
         weight of my set of clubs is less than that carried by a typical player. For this
         trip, my total bag weight was 39 lbs. along with my panels and tripod.&lt;br&gt;
         &amp;nbsp;&lt;br&gt;
         So while golfing and painting during a recent vacation in California, I got a chance
         to experiment with a limited palette that I’ve been anxious to try. (No, I did not
         golf and paint at the same time. This combination slows down the game too much and
         really upsets the course officials.)&amp;nbsp; I must credit this palette of colors to
         Scott Gellatly, Technical Support Representative at Gamblin Artists Colors Co (&lt;a href="http://"&gt;http://www.scottgellatly.com/&lt;/a&gt;).
         His paintings are amazing. While the palette I’m about to describe isn’t his exclusive
         palette, Gellatly and I discussed it as an alternate limited palette during a past
         visit he made to Washington.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         It’s a fairly simple three-color primary palette composed of Indian Yellow, Quinacridone
         Violet and Prussian Blue. (You can substitute Phthalocyanine Blue for Prussian Blue
         without any drastic modifications.) Each color alone and the combination of colors
         to create secondary hues provide a fairly muted palette. Each of the primary colors
         is somewhat low in chroma and value. Adding a bit of white helps to bring out the
         full extent of their character. I liked the range of greens made with Prussian Blue
         and Indian Yellow. The violets are fine made of varying combinations of magenta and
         blue. Orange hues are fiery and a good start for making earthy browns when mixed with
         a bit of blue and black. Adding white to the secondary green mixture doesn’t create
         acceptable green hues for landscape painting. Titanium white turns mixed greens into
         pale, minty hues that are not within a range I like for landscape foliage. Interestingly,
         Indian Yellow combined with titanium white makes the yellow appear to be sullied with
         a blue grey cast. This is one case where the cool bluishness of titanium dioxide works
         against the combination of yellow pigments used in Indian Yellow. This effect is partly
         due to Indian Yellow being transparent and susceptible to the overpowering influence
         of a strong, opaque, cool pigment like titanium white. This mixture might look better
         with a less powerful, semi-transparent mixing white. As I said at the start, the overall
         palette is muted so when I need to achieve high chroma colors akin to permanent green
         light, cadmium yellow medium or cadmium red, I really need to add those to the palette
         to achieve a broader range. I don’t mind doing that, since the need for opaque pigments
         to round out this palette is welcome. The missing component is an opaque blue. Cerulean
         does not really function for me as an ideal opaque blue. It’s intriguing that a fairly
         neutral or cool opaque blue has never been synthesized.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         Regardless of its few shortcomings, I am anxious to put this palette through a real
         challenge and take it outside for a &lt;i&gt;plein air&lt;/i&gt; session.&amp;nbsp; Perhaps I will
         post the completed painting. Do you have a favorite simple, minimal palette of colors?&amp;nbsp;
         Please share them with me. I always find it interesting to discover what colors an
         artist is using.&lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;br&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;p&gt;
      &lt;/p&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,ba14b9ad-d4e2-4898-8b10-36af563598cd.aspx</comments>
      <category>Palettes</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe</wfw:commentRss>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div>
                <div>
                  <div>
                    <img src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/content/binary/Pastels-lightfastnessblog.jpg" alt="Pastels-lightfastnessblog.jpg" align="left" border="0" height="235" width="177" />I
                     had the wonderful opportunity to attend the IAPS meeting in Albuquerque, NM, last
                     week and delivered a lecture on lightfastness testing of pastels. The audience was
                     fantastic! Lots of great questions were posed on the issues involved. I believe that
                     pastel artists have become accustomed to the notion that some pastels fade when exposed
                     to light. My presentation on lightfastness problems concerned the audience but did
                     not shock them as it did when presented several years ago by one of my colleagues.<br /><br />
                     The key to getting manufacturers to create reliable pastels will come when the American
                     Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) establishes a pastel standard. This standard
                     will map out the protocol for conducting lightfastness testing, enabling manufacturers
                     to test and evaluate pastels they make so if several color mixtures don't meet adequate
                     lightfastness ratings, they can reformulate the pastels.<br /><br />
                     That standard is a year or two away from completion—if no serious impediments come
                     in the way of the current writing and preliminary testing process. The one refreshing
                     aspect to this pastel standard will be that finished pastel products, not just the
                     pigments themselves will be evaluated. This is important because some pigments can
                     perform well without any additives, but when mixed with other components, the combination
                     of materials will result in an unstable product in terms of lightfastness. The opposite
                     can be true as well. Unstable pigments may perform well when mixed with other pastel
                     ingredients and prove to be highly lightfast.<br /><br />
                     Pastel artists don't have to be held captive when it comes to knowing what colors
                     are good performers and those that fade fairly quickly when exposed to light. A protocol
                     that provides a very good indicator of how materials will behave if exposed to light,
                     is available for anyone to use. The method is fairly simple. Artists can prepare a
                     suitable sample card that exposes a portion of the pastel to light while leaving a
                     portion masked from any exposure. For a how-to on testing your own pastels for lightfastness, <a href="http://www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997">click
                     here</a>.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997">www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997</a><br /><br /><p></p></div>
                </div>
              </div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe" />
      </body>
      <title>Pastels and Lightfastness</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Pastels+And+Lightfastness.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Tue, 22 May 2007 17:17:40 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div&gt;
            &lt;div&gt;
               &lt;div&gt;&lt;img src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/content/binary/Pastels-lightfastnessblog.jpg" alt="Pastels-lightfastnessblog.jpg" align="left" border="0" height="235" width="177"&gt;I
                  had the wonderful opportunity to attend the IAPS meeting in Albuquerque, NM, last
                  week and delivered a lecture on lightfastness testing of pastels. The audience was
                  fantastic! Lots of great questions were posed on the issues involved. I believe that
                  pastel artists have become accustomed to the notion that some pastels fade when exposed
                  to light. My presentation on lightfastness problems concerned the audience but did
                  not shock them as it did when presented several years ago by one of my colleagues.&lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  The key to getting manufacturers to create reliable pastels will come when the American
                  Society of Testing and Materials (ASTM) establishes a pastel standard. This standard
                  will map out the protocol for conducting lightfastness testing, enabling manufacturers
                  to test and evaluate pastels they make so if several color mixtures don't meet adequate
                  lightfastness ratings, they can reformulate the pastels.&lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  That standard is a year or two away from completion—if no serious impediments come
                  in the way of the current writing and preliminary testing process. The one refreshing
                  aspect to this pastel standard will be that finished pastel products, not just the
                  pigments themselves will be evaluated. This is important because some pigments can
                  perform well without any additives, but when mixed with other components, the combination
                  of materials will result in an unstable product in terms of lightfastness. The opposite
                  can be true as well. Unstable pigments may perform well when mixed with other pastel
                  ingredients and prove to be highly lightfast.&lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  Pastel artists don't have to be held captive when it comes to knowing what colors
                  are good performers and those that fade fairly quickly when exposed to light. A protocol
                  that provides a very good indicator of how materials will behave if exposed to light,
                  is available for anyone to use. The method is fairly simple. Artists can prepare a
                  suitable sample card that exposes a portion of the pastel to light while leaving a
                  portion masked from any exposure. For a how-to on testing your own pastels for lightfastness, &lt;a href="http://www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997"&gt;click
                  here&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;a href="http://www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997"&gt;www.artistsmagazine.com/tam_qnaarchive.asp?id=2997&lt;/a&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;br&gt;
                  &lt;p&gt;
                  &lt;/p&gt;
               &lt;/div&gt;
            &lt;/div&gt;
         &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,708907ce-ec25-4e6b-b55b-9dc101c3cdfe.aspx</comments>
      <category>Archival standards;Lightfastness</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div align="left">In preparing to set out to paint in a remote location, good planning
               and preparation are necessary. An opportunity to paint outside gave me reason to look
               carefully at my palette of colors and make some decisions. I am torn between starting
               out with a very limited palette of three primary colors, along with black and white,
               and learn to cope with whatever comes my way. However, this yearly painting outing
               and the opportunity to do some serious outdoor work are not the ideal time to experiment
               with a palette unfamiliar to me.<br /><br />
               I have lectured on palette choices for the last year, and one would think that armed
               with this knowledge, I could make an educated decision and come up with a reasonable
               number of colors that would satisfy me. Recently, I worked a good deal with some color
               mixing exercises that forced me to use a restricted palette. The motions of applying
               palette knife to paint and spreading it about to create the desired colors felt as
               if I were using my regular comfortable set of colors, but I had to repeat the “mantra”
               that outlined the basic primary color mixing combinations that we all learned as children.
               I did not have a lot of choices, so my natural tendency to reach for a secondary or
               tertiary color to modify a mixture was taken away. Now I had to make the secondary
               or tertiary color from scratch and adjust accordingly. 
               <br /><br />
               Then I realized, when working with a limited palette of red, blue and yellow, our
               brains (or at least my brain) are not adapted to see a color that we wish to create
               as a formulation of percentages of red, blue and yellow. I can’t look at the shadow
               side of a piece of fruit like an orange and think in my head: 4 dabs of yellow, 1.7
               dabs of red and 1.5 dabs of blue. I will make an orange color out of the red and yellow
               and then adjust it with some blue to provide the right value and chroma to indicate
               the shadow side of the painting of the fruit in question. I would never start with
               the blue and yellow to make green and then adjust it with the yellow to make the orange
               color I required. That is a simple example. Try making a color that approaches a tinted
               grey. Mixing grey hues from primary palettes takes a fairly high degree of patience
               and perseverance.  For me, once the right grey value is achieved, I can add the
               hue to tilt the grey in the direction that I want. The point is that sometimes the
               most efficient way to get to a color is by a succession of mixing waypoints rather
               than a straight line.  
               <br /><br />
               Critics of "expanded palettes" would claim that by juggling so many colors, another
               term for variables, the chance of failure increases. This argument has a lot of legitimacy.
               So many colors laid out on a palette become a confusing array of choices and they
               can overcrowd an artist’s work surface. It becomes hard to make sense of the number
               of combinations that can be used to achieve a desired color.  
               <br /><br />
               "Limited palette" supporters label colors outside of the primaries as “convenience”
               colors.  The term “convenience” colors seems to imply that artists who use them
               are lazy or inept at color mixing. I don’t agree for two important reasons. In most
               cases, I would rather apply paint to the painting rather than spend time mixing. An
               artist does not get “extra credit” for solving difficult mixing problems. As a matter
               of fact, an artist is penalized to an extent if color mixing takes so long that production
               of finished paintings suffers. The viewer does not care how hard the artist worked
               to achieve a desired color. The second reason that convenience colors seem fine for
               use is that many secondary/tertiary hues offer subtle overtones that a strict primary
               palette would be hard pressed to achieve.  
               <br /><br />
               Both primary palette and expanded palette artists quickly realize that compromise
               is a part of either system. Expanded palette users must gain mastery of the subtle
               difference and oddities of each of the colors they use.  They gain in having
               colors that suit their personal style and are shaped to the type of hues they wish
               to represent. Primary palette users must select three broad ranges, powerful colors,
               so that with only these hues, they can create every possible color.  While this
               feat is achievable, the price is high especially for landscape painters. High chroma
               primary colors must be muted considerable to match the look and feel of a natural
               landscape.  Primary palettes shout when soft whispers are the order of the day.
               Primary palette artists have the advantage of quickly creating high chroma mixes that
               are very powerful.<br /><br />
               One of the sayings that nearly everyone who has visited a hardware store knows is,
               “ the right tool for the job.” This is so very appropriate to the selection of colors
               for an artist’s palette.  An artist’s style, subject matter and personal approach
               to mastering color mixing all play an important role in selecting palette colors.
               Do you have a different opinion or a palette that does amazing things?  Please
               reply.   
               <br /><br /><i>For more information on palettes: </i><br />
               To read Nita Leland’s recommended list of palettes for varying painting occasions,
               click on<br /><a href="http://">www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=2466. </a>Practice mixing
               colors with Judi Betts: <a href="http://">www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=1826.</a> And
               Kay Carnie advises you to work with a limited palette of primary colors in<br /><a href="http://">www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=1325.</a><br /></div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a" />
      </body>
      <title>Limited or Unlimited Palette?</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Limited+Or+Unlimited+Palette.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Thu, 17 May 2007 17:53:40 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div align="left"&gt;In preparing to set out to paint in a remote location, good planning
            and preparation are necessary. An opportunity to paint outside gave me reason to look
            carefully at my palette of colors and make some decisions. I am torn between starting
            out with a very limited palette of three primary colors, along with black and white,
            and learn to cope with whatever comes my way. However, this yearly painting outing
            and the opportunity to do some serious outdoor work are not the ideal time to experiment
            with a palette unfamiliar to me.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I have lectured on palette choices for the last year, and one would think that armed
            with this knowledge, I could make an educated decision and come up with a reasonable
            number of colors that would satisfy me. Recently, I worked a good deal with some color
            mixing exercises that forced me to use a restricted palette. The motions of applying
            palette knife to paint and spreading it about to create the desired colors felt as
            if I were using my regular comfortable set of colors, but I had to repeat the “mantra”
            that outlined the basic primary color mixing combinations that we all learned as children.
            I did not have a lot of choices, so my natural tendency to reach for a secondary or
            tertiary color to modify a mixture was taken away. Now I had to make the secondary
            or tertiary color from scratch and adjust accordingly. 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Then I realized, when working with a limited palette of red, blue and yellow, our
            brains (or at least my brain) are not adapted to see a color that we wish to create
            as a formulation of percentages of red, blue and yellow. I can’t look at the shadow
            side of a piece of fruit like an orange and think in my head: 4 dabs of yellow, 1.7
            dabs of red and 1.5 dabs of blue. I will make an orange color out of the red and yellow
            and then adjust it with some blue to provide the right value and chroma to indicate
            the shadow side of the painting of the fruit in question. I would never start with
            the blue and yellow to make green and then adjust it with the yellow to make the orange
            color I required. That is a simple example. Try making a color that approaches a tinted
            grey. Mixing grey hues from primary palettes takes a fairly high degree of patience
            and perseverance.&amp;nbsp; For me, once the right grey value is achieved, I can add the
            hue to tilt the grey in the direction that I want. The point is that sometimes the
            most efficient way to get to a color is by a succession of mixing waypoints rather
            than a straight line.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Critics of "expanded palettes" would claim that by juggling so many colors, another
            term for variables, the chance of failure increases. This argument has a lot of legitimacy.
            So many colors laid out on a palette become a confusing array of choices and they
            can overcrowd an artist’s work surface. It becomes hard to make sense of the number
            of combinations that can be used to achieve a desired color.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            "Limited palette" supporters label colors outside of the primaries as “convenience”
            colors.&amp;nbsp; The term “convenience” colors seems to imply that artists who use them
            are lazy or inept at color mixing. I don’t agree for two important reasons. In most
            cases, I would rather apply paint to the painting rather than spend time mixing. An
            artist does not get “extra credit” for solving difficult mixing problems. As a matter
            of fact, an artist is penalized to an extent if color mixing takes so long that production
            of finished paintings suffers. The viewer does not care how hard the artist worked
            to achieve a desired color. The second reason that convenience colors seem fine for
            use is that many secondary/tertiary hues offer subtle overtones that a strict primary
            palette would be hard pressed to achieve.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Both primary palette and expanded palette artists quickly realize that compromise
            is a part of either system. Expanded palette users must gain mastery of the subtle
            difference and oddities of each of the colors they use.&amp;nbsp; They gain in having
            colors that suit their personal style and are shaped to the type of hues they wish
            to represent. Primary palette users must select three broad ranges, powerful colors,
            so that with only these hues, they can create every possible color.&amp;nbsp; While this
            feat is achievable, the price is high especially for landscape painters. High chroma
            primary colors must be muted considerable to match the look and feel of a natural
            landscape.&amp;nbsp; Primary palettes shout when soft whispers are the order of the day.
            Primary palette artists have the advantage of quickly creating high chroma mixes that
            are very powerful.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            One of the sayings that nearly everyone who has visited a hardware store knows is,
            “ the right tool for the job.” This is so very appropriate to the selection of colors
            for an artist’s palette.&amp;nbsp; An artist’s style, subject matter and personal approach
            to mastering color mixing all play an important role in selecting palette colors.
            Do you have a different opinion or a palette that does amazing things?&amp;nbsp; Please
            reply.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;i&gt;For more information on palettes: &lt;/i&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            To read Nita Leland’s recommended list of palettes for varying painting occasions,
            click on&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;a href="http://"&gt;www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=2466. &lt;/a&gt;Practice mixing
            colors with Judi Betts: &lt;a href="http://"&gt;www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=1826.&lt;/a&gt; And
            Kay Carnie advises you to work with a limited palette of primary colors in&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;a href="http://"&gt;www.artistsmagazine.com/article.asp?id=1325.&lt;/a&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
         &lt;/div&gt;
      &lt;/div&gt;
   &lt;/div&gt;
&lt;/div&gt;
&lt;img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a" /&gt;</description>
      <comments>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,f3aca5c8-f40e-4a54-b42c-126482f9386a.aspx</comments>
      <category>Palettes</category>
    </item>
    <item>
      <trackback:ping>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Trackback.aspx?guid=4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c</trackback:ping>
      <pingback:server>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/pingback.aspx</pingback:server>
      <pingback:target>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c.aspx</pingback:target>
      <dc:creator>
      </dc:creator>
      <wfw:comment>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/CommentView,guid,4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c.aspx</wfw:comment>
      <wfw:commentRss>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/SyndicationService.asmx/GetEntryCommentsRss?guid=4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c</wfw:commentRss>
      <slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
      <body xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
        <div>
          <div>
            <div>
              <div align="left">I have a keen interest in how things are put together. When I was
               a child, my parents treated me to mechanical toys like tractors, space ships and boats
               that were made out of metal and had small tabs that bound each piece of the toy together.
               Using a small screwdriver, I could pry open the tabs and disassemble the toy into
               its component parts. Once my father brought home a tractor that had a transparent
               engine with pistons that you could see moving up and down as the tractor moved about
               the floor. It took me about 45 minutes to take the entire thing apart. I was desperate
               to see what made the pistons go up and down.  
               <br /><br />
               I’ve carried that curiosity about how things are made into adulthood. I’m fascinated
               to know how paints are made. While some art material manufacturers may have believed
               that my probing questions were aimed at exposing the secrets of making paints so that
               I could go out and start a company of my own, I was merely interested in knowing how
               the paint was made. (Note: After asking enough questions about paint manufacturing,
               I believe you would have to be insane to start to make paint today. It is expensive
               to undertake, fraught with potential problems and comes without much support. 
               <br /><br />
               On a number of trips to New York I followed an art materials “pilgrimage route” that
               started on Canal Street with a visit to Pearl Paint (<a href="http:///">www.pearlpaint.com)</a>. 
               Moving up through lower Manhattan, I found three art materials stores in sight of
               each other. David Davis Fine Art Materials (<a href="http://">www.daviddavisnyc.stores.yahoo.net</a>),
               Kremer Pigments <a href="http://">(www.kremer-pigmente.de/homee.htm</a>) and Vasari
               Classic Artists’ Oil Colors (<a href="http:///">http://www.shopvasaricolors.com</a>)
               were all within a hundred yards of each other. The art materials walk would conclude
               on Third Avenue with a visit to New York Central Art Supply (<a href="http://">www.nycentralart.com)</a>.<br /><br />
               I met Gail, the owner of Vasari Classic Artists’ Oil Colors several years ago the
               first time I made the “pilgrimage” in lower Manhattan. She told me about the paints
               and had a unique method of discussing the qualities of each pigment. She had a light
               gray plastic laminate table and mixed paint on the surface to show the working properties
               of the colors she discussed. I was mesmerized by her knowledge of pigments and the
               color combinations she produced. Colors I never considered using were transformed
               by mixing them with other paints to produce a luscious array of hues. It opened my
               mind to the vast number of combinations that exists for making colors that artist
               can select. It made me realize that palettes are very personal and based on ways we
               individually map out our color space.  
               <br /><br />
               Vasari uses a simple approach to making paint. However, the selection of colors and
               suggestions for mixing are far from simple. Vasari avoids avoid the use of fillers
               and dryers and make paint in the same fashion as had been done by 16th- through19th-century
               color men. Vasari basically uses alkali refined linseed oil and powder pigment to
               produce their product line. Vasari paints contain a substantial amount of pigment,
               and they carefully select hues from a wide range of pigments available in order to
               obtain colors that help the artist to avoid making muddy, dull mixtures.<br /><br />
               Paint makers have no manual that provides them instruction for making paint. They
               learn through a combination of trial and error along with some technical support by
               the pigment and /or binder manufacturer. All of the manufacturers today had to learn
               to make paint by some very generic formulas along with a lot of experimentation. This
               is the part where I refer to bravery triumphs over insanity and allows the paint maker
               to make a living selling paint. 
               <br /><br />
               Since our first meeting I’ve grown to appreciate the personal vision that Vasari puts
               into the oil paints they make. They provide another avenue for artists to explore.
               The diversity of personal visions is what makes the artistic community so great, and
               it’s the diversity of personal visions each manufacturer embodies—engineered into
               the products available to artists—that make this industry so interesting. 
               <br /><br />
               Perhaps you have a story to share about a personal experience with a paint manufacturer. 
               The industry has so many choices for artists. I’ve had marvelous experiences using
               and talking to the folks who make Gamblin Artists Colors (<a href="http://">www.gamblincolors.com</a>),
               Winsor &amp; Newton (<a href="http://">http://www.winsornewton.com)</a>, Golden Artist
               Acrylics (<a href="http://">www.goldenpaints.com</a>) and many others. Each has a
               part to contribute to making the world of artists’ materials.  I will talk about
               each in future Web log entries.
            </div>
            </div>
          </div>
        </div>
        <img width="0" height="0" src="http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/aggbug.ashx?id=4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c" />
      </body>
      <title>Fearlessly Making Paint</title>
      <guid>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/PermaLink,guid,4624f531-68bb-4805-8474-4a41cc66f20c.aspx</guid>
      <link>http://artmaterials.artistsnetwork.com/Fearlessly+Making+Paint.aspx</link>
      <pubDate>Wed, 09 May 2007 18:47:46 GMT</pubDate>
      <description>&lt;div&gt;
   &lt;div&gt;
      &lt;div&gt;
         &lt;div align="left"&gt;I have a keen interest in how things are put together. When I was
            a child, my parents treated me to mechanical toys like tractors, space ships and boats
            that were made out of metal and had small tabs that bound each piece of the toy together.
            Using a small screwdriver, I could pry open the tabs and disassemble the toy into
            its component parts. Once my father brought home a tractor that had a transparent
            engine with pistons that you could see moving up and down as the tractor moved about
            the floor. It took me about 45 minutes to take the entire thing apart. I was desperate
            to see what made the pistons go up and down.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I’ve carried that curiosity about how things are made into adulthood. I’m fascinated
            to know how paints are made. While some art material manufacturers may have believed
            that my probing questions were aimed at exposing the secrets of making paints so that
            I could go out and start a company of my own, I was merely interested in knowing how
            the paint was made. (Note: After asking enough questions about paint manufacturing,
            I believe you would have to be insane to start to make paint today. It is expensive
            to undertake, fraught with potential problems and comes without much support. 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            On a number of trips to New York I followed an art materials “pilgrimage route” that
            started on Canal Street with a visit to Pearl Paint (&lt;a href="http:///"&gt;www.pearlpaint.com)&lt;/a&gt;.&amp;nbsp;
            Moving up through lower Manhattan, I found three art materials stores in sight of
            each other. David Davis Fine Art Materials (&lt;a href="http://"&gt;www.daviddavisnyc.stores.yahoo.net&lt;/a&gt;),
            Kremer Pigments &lt;a href="http://"&gt;(www.kremer-pigmente.de/homee.htm&lt;/a&gt;) and Vasari
            Classic Artists’ Oil Colors (&lt;a href="http:///"&gt;http://www.shopvasaricolors.com&lt;/a&gt;)
            were all within a hundred yards of each other. The art materials walk would conclude
            on Third Avenue with a visit to New York Central Art Supply (&lt;a href="http://"&gt;www.nycentralart.com)&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            I met Gail, the owner of Vasari Classic Artists’ Oil Colors several years ago the
            first time I made the “pilgrimage” in lower Manhattan. She told me about the paints
            and had a unique method of discussing the qualities of each pigment. She had a light
            gray plastic laminate table and mixed paint on the surface to show the working properties
            of the colors she discussed. I was mesmerized by her knowledge of pigments and the
            color combinations she produced. Colors I never considered using were transformed
            by mixing them with other paints to produce a luscious array of hues. It opened my
            mind to the vast number of combinations that exists for making colors that artist
            can select. It made me realize that palettes are very personal and based on ways we
            individually map out our color space.&amp;nbsp; 
            &lt;br&gt;
            &lt;br&gt;
            Vasari uses a simple approach to making paint. However, the selection of colors and
            suggestions for mixing are far from simple. Vasari avoids avoid the use of fillers
        