How to Oil Paint with ZERO Toxic Fumes

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  • čas přidán 9. 11. 2022
  • In this video I explain how it is possible to paint in oil without breathing toxic fumes.
    For more about my art supply company and the paint that I use visit:
    genevafineart.com
    For online classes with Mark Carder visit www.carderartacademy.com/
    For private classes in my Austin TX studio visit www.drawmixpaint.com/
    To view my Full Course for how to paint in oil, go to www.drawmixpaint.com

Komentáře • 141

  • @user-hx1ku8sp8c
    @user-hx1ku8sp8c Před měsícem +5

    Another approach might be to do the under-painting in acrylic, let it dry fully and overpaint in oil - for studies, I often use cardboard sealed with a couple layers of acrylic 'gesso'. Modern gesso is usually acrylic with chalk and titanium white, so most of us are painting over acrylic in any case.

  • @sarahdescoteaux1840
    @sarahdescoteaux1840 Před 8 měsíci +4

    I just use water mixable oils. I thin the paint with water for the under painting. Seem to work fine as long as you don't add too much water.

  • @leonardodelpuertoburk2439

    I'm an art student, and almost all my classmates, myself included, can only paint in our bedrooms, meaning we sleep with the toxic fumes. I knew it was bad, but I didn't know it was that bad.

    • @arachosia
      @arachosia Před 8 měsíci +8

      Your art teachers should be fired for not informing you

    • @jjk2one
      @jjk2one Před 4 měsíci +2

      Acrylic is bad too

    • @PK-se2jh
      @PK-se2jh Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@jjk2one omg really? aaa :'0

    • @jjk2one
      @jjk2one Před 4 měsíci

      @@PK-se2jh yes really martians make it

    • @mikethebloodthirsty
      @mikethebloodthirsty Před 3 měsíci

      ​​​@@jjk2oneit's not.

  • @GrayWithMe
    @GrayWithMe Před 2 měsíci +3

    I love the water mixable oil paints

  • @wayfaringspacepoet
    @wayfaringspacepoet Před rokem +18

    there are brands such as Sennelier which have non-toxic oil paint mediums, and I've found them to be an incredibly effective alternative to solvents. I highly recommend them.

    • @kidsthesedays8911
      @kidsthesedays8911 Před rokem +4

      Also the best non-toxic paints, in my experience, are Geneva oil paints. And the pigment load is great!

  • @jeremyk3465
    @jeremyk3465 Před rokem +8

    I use W&N Artisan … so good to be able to just clean up with water and leave brushes in a tube of water

  • @margaretoconnor874
    @margaretoconnor874 Před rokem +2

    I took lessons from a wonderful artist who switched to acrylics because of toxicity! Just sent your CZcams to him . He is a magnificent oil painter and hope he will return to it. Love all your videos!

  • @helixfaust9144
    @helixfaust9144 Před rokem +5

    I have been using M.Graham walnut/alkyd fast dry medium and Chelsea Classical Studio Citrus Essence as a solvent and cleaner. They have worked excellent. Sometimes switch to safflower oil with a bit of clove but that's when I get lazy and don't want to clean brushes. Use masters soap for cleaning and long term brush storage.

  • @RonSwansonIsMyGod
    @RonSwansonIsMyGod Před rokem +7

    Yes! That's how I found your work and this channel! I was thinking about getting into oil painting but could not get myself to start because I was leery of the toxic materials. Geneva art supply: problem solved!
    I worked with an old guy once that was a painter who's health and especially memory were going due to the materials he'd used his whole life. I think he was getting worse even in the six months I knew him. He was having trouble remembering conversations we'd had and my name, etc.
    Speaking of, what happened to your foundation? It's been out of stock for a while now. I wanted to get some. I was also interested in the palettes and some other things that have been out of stock.

  • @splintmeow4723
    @splintmeow4723 Před rokem +3

    Thank you so much, been grappling with this as a future issue at a new place ❤

  • @n.j.9728
    @n.j.9728 Před rokem +17

    Goodness me. My first painting teacher was an old and prominent artist who did look like he'd been inhaling turpentine fumes all his life and he actually recommended it to his students as an affordable solvent. I was using turpentine myself for a few years after that and did not realize the danger. To be honest, I only switched to mineral spirits because we had group painting sessions with live models and one of the artists who attended them with me was completely intolerant to the smell of turpentine so she asked me to stop bringing it

    • @n.j.9728
      @n.j.9728 Před rokem +3

      @J.Shelby That's the thing - I personally didn't mind the smell at all and it was making me feel more artistic using the good old turps like the grand masters of the past. It is also super cheap so you can fill in a whole bucket with it, throw in your brushes after each session and never bother washing them. We live and learn that there ain't such thing in life as a free lunch

    • @theanalymous
      @theanalymous Před rokem +1

      @J.Shelby what about acrylic ?

    • @n.j.9728
      @n.j.9728 Před rokem

      @J.Shelby Don't get me wrong, I'm not advocating the use of turpentine. Mineral spirits should do just fine for most folks. Never tried water-soluble oils so can't comment on those

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem

      @J.Shelby Cobra paints are good. You can thin them with water. A lot of people like their 91 medium. They will mix with regular oil paints, up to a point, like 1/3rd or 1/2" and they still work as water soluble, which is nice if there is a paint you can't get in their product line.
      Cobra has a whole course online about them, and it is very good.
      There is also an excellent video by Charlie Hunter that includes his whole rundown on the cobra paints and gear he uses, and that part is free online: czcams.com/video/ki4Tk9WrMI4/video.html
      I do use Geneva paints, and they have many excellent qualities. But not everyone can get to them. In the US is shouldn't be a problem.

  • @remytherat2175
    @remytherat2175 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Wow! I'm so glad I came across this video! I've been craving to paint again, and oils have always been my favorite. Also-- wow, a fellow Austinite! How awesome! Thanks for the tips!

  • @LukeDurdin
    @LukeDurdin Před rokem +8

    Great video! few tips for fellow Solvent free artists, you can stain the canvas with acrylic paint. as long as you don't thin to much with water and wait for it to fully cure it works wonders!
    Also Gamblin has a solvent free line of oil painting mediums! They have a safflower medium to speed up the drying time, a gel medium for more impasto aswell as plain safflower oil to help clean your brushes.
    I've been painting solvent free (besides Vanishing) for over 4 years and you can really do any oil painting technique other than glazing painting solvent free!

    • @saigeeta28
      @saigeeta28 Před 8 měsíci

      @lukedurdin how can we clean these brushes then. Other then turp

    • @michelegirard
      @michelegirard Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@saigeeta28dip them in walnut oil to remove most of the paint. Murphy's oil soap as a final cleaning.

    • @saigeeta28
      @saigeeta28 Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@michelegirard that's a saviour tip.excited to try

  • @nestingbirdcreations
    @nestingbirdcreations Před rokem +11

    It IS possible to do a “stain” or first lean layer using water mixable oil paints such as Cobra Artist and WATER to thin it. I do this all the time. For subsequent fatter layers, I typically use paint straight from the tube or with a bit of water mixable linseed oil or water mixable painting medium added. Not ALL brands of wmo paints thin well with water, however, so be sure to research! Makes cleanup much easier too-Dawn dish soap!

    • @suzannebonham583
      @suzannebonham583 Před 9 měsíci

      I wondered about this! Do you go over this later with water mixable oils or do you use conventional oils over your water-mixable lean layer? If you use conventionals over water mixables, do you worry about water being trapped underneath? Or do you allow your under-layer to dry thoroughly first? Thanks!

    • @nestingbirdcreations
      @nestingbirdcreations Před 9 měsíci

      @@suzannebonham583 Hi Suzanne! After my first lean layer with water mixable oils thinned with water, I go right into other layers as needed. These other layers are also water mixable oils-I don’t paint with non-water mixable oils, although most of the brands let you mix up to about 30% of regular oil paint to any water mixable oil. More than that, and you tend to lose the ability to use soap and water for clean up.
      As far as letting it “dry”, the water evaporates pretty quickly, probably a little slower than using a solvent like odorless mineral spirits for regular oils or even the water mixable thinner for wmo’s made by Winsor & Newton.
      You could definitely use regular oils over the wmo’s, painting alla prima or indirectly in layers, waiting just long enough for the water to evaporate from the first layer. I would probably wait longer (overnight or at least a few hours) if painting on canvas than, say, gessoed hardboard. I would think canvas would retain water longer, so longer drying time.
      Of course, if you want to avoid solvent altogether, you could also just do your first layer in acrylic. I often do this as well.
      Hope this helps!

    • @sarahdescoteaux1840
      @sarahdescoteaux1840 Před 8 měsíci

      I use water mixable oils in this way. Seems to work fine

    • @Sarah-vy7jj
      @Sarah-vy7jj Před 6 měsíci

      @@suzannebonham583 im sure you’ve probably already found answer to your question but in case you haven’t, yes it seems to be fine! Read “the new oil painting method” and it talks about using acrylic as an under painting. You do however need to allow it to dry before going over with oil… I think the conservative estimate is 3 days but I think it depends on your climate. Hope that helps!

    • @s7r49
      @s7r49 Před 6 měsíci

      @@Sarah-vy7jj A lot of miniature painters I know Lay down the shading with black and white primer using and airbrush from below/above, then stain the miniatures with a brush and transparent acrylic paint (miniature contrast or speedpaints) Then paint over that with oil paint. It sure makes painting miniatures easy. I actually stumbled on this video because my new painting space has near zero ventilation and I'm sick of using acrylics, I figured I had so much oil paint gear in my garage but I was trying to figure out how I could paint with oil paint in my living room with cats (and myself lol) but I'm really apt to use a lot of mineral spirits and liquin when I paint miniatures, I think I just need to figure out a way to vent a small fume hood to paint in. I am going to try thinning the paints with more oil (and using a half dozen paint brushes at a time so i can just clean them outside aftewards) but I dont think the texture will be quite how I like it, and the half day of drying time with liquin getting extended to several days is not preferable. I just don't know.

  • @calaverius
    @calaverius Před rokem +34

    A solution for underpainting stains is to do it in acrylic.

    • @Jay-bw3fl
      @Jay-bw3fl Před rokem +8

      I have always wondered why no one seems to prefer doing acrylic under paintings for oil paintings. Is there any downside?

    • @jackmaxwell3134
      @jackmaxwell3134 Před rokem +5

      Acrylic is also toxic.

    • @RonSwansonIsMyGod
      @RonSwansonIsMyGod Před rokem +1

      I've ended up resorting to acrylic for the stain because his stuff on Geneva has been sold out now for quite a while.

    • @yappering
      @yappering Před rokem +4

      @J.Shelby yes. Isn't a gessoed white canvas a type of acrylic?

    • @djo-dji6018
      @djo-dji6018 Před rokem +3

      @@jackmaxwell3134 No, they are not toxic.

  • @cherylannhillsartist
    @cherylannhillsartist Před rokem +1

    I've been saying this for years! Hard to convince people though because they have a preconceived notion that oil paints are bad. Absolutely not true!! The solvents are bad. I've painted solvent-free for nearly 3 yrs now. I use walnut oil based paints and the pure oil when I want to thin down the paint for various techniques. To clean brushes, I use dish detergent; Dawn being my go to. Thank you for reinforcing this message so that more painters will be confident in painting with oil paints and following a solvent-free practice. :)

  • @ravaegrant196
    @ravaegrant196 Před rokem +3

    I bought your paint and the clove oil its all wonderful, the colors are rich and it flows beautiful. Im hoping to buy more from you ,like the pallet/ table ect ..I keep checking your website and its out of stock .Not complaining just want the whole set !

  • @johnster02
    @johnster02 Před rokem +5

    i’ve been waiting for you to make a video like this. i too avoided oil painting because of the fumes. i looked up organic non toxic brush cleaner and that works well for cleaning. acrylic paint as an under layer and background works for me as well. lavender oil smells great and that works as a natural thinner as well. his method of keeping the brushes constantly dipped in oil means you don’t have to clean the oil brushes, so the only thing you would need the thinner for is for a base layer, which you can do with acrylic or (like he said) outside. i hate the smell of things in the studio. anything can take me out of the zone and make me not want to sit back down to work on something. it’s creatively important that i know i’m not potentially getting cancer from the things i paint with. great video as always!

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem +2

      @J.Shelby Sooner or later someone has a reason why everything one does creates cracks. Tons of top professional painters use acrylic paint under oil. In fact most gesso is acrylic, and there are people who will tell you that it isn't good either. All that may be true, but I can tell you something else that isn't good, 99.9% of the paintings people do. Use reasonable materials and paint lots of paintings.

    • @johnster02
      @johnster02 Před rokem +1

      @@HondoTrailside water color underpainting solves this problem as well

    • @deangunthertattootipsandtr6129
      @deangunthertattootipsandtr6129 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@J.S.temporarypainting acrylic over oils causes cracks, not the other way around.

  • @SuleymanBulutistatis
    @SuleymanBulutistatis Před rokem +2

    Sir, thanks for the information. By the way linseed oil can cause fire they say.

  • @ripe_avocados
    @ripe_avocados Před měsícem

    Great video thank you. Can we also use vegetable oil or extra virgin olive oil?

  • @mrsnrub9780
    @mrsnrub9780 Před rokem +5

    Straight from the tube works for me in about 75% to 80% of cases - particularly with those naturally oily pigments, like alizarin crimson and indanthrone blue. When painting fat over lean, I just add a few drops of stand oil and fire away as normal. I've never needed to use solvents and never will. As someone else in the comments mentioned, acrylic primers are an excellent choice, particularly in the days now of pigmented primers, where you can even do full block-ins with coloured primer and under-paint with complementary colours.
    *Oh, by the way, this is not to discredit Geneva. With the way my painting style is evolving I'm finding more and more that I favour a stringy honey-like viscosity to my paint. I may even make the switch at some point.

    • @starvictory7079
      @starvictory7079 Před rokem

      Can you explain what you mean with the block in primers and then underpainting with complementary colours? Do you mean a coloured gesso and that the shadows are done on top?
      Sorry! :)

    • @mrsnrub9780
      @mrsnrub9780 Před rokem +5

      @@starvictory7079 Micheal Harding (before we start, I'm NOT affiliated with him and don't want people to write off Geneva paints or Mark's system just because *I* have an opinion) does a range of pigmented, acrylic-based primers that allow you to tone the canvas with colour. A common trick for portrait painters is to tone a canvas with an earthy green, which in turn allows for the fleshy tones (especially in the cheeks and lips, think alizarin crimson) to play up and dance with the greens underneath. (That's what I mean when I say complementary.)
      That's really what it boils down to. I tend to block in with the opposite (complementary) colour. So if I'm painting an orange, I'll block it in with blue. Or if I'm painting a lemon, I'll block it in with purple. I'm not really a believer in generic, burnt umber washes. NOT that they don't work. I just like to approach by a case by case basis.

    • @starvictory7079
      @starvictory7079 Před rokem +2

      @@mrsnrub9780 Thank you. So like a verdaccio technique.
      I like the block in idea with complementary colours.
      Tack så mycket!
      Greetings from Sweden

    • @mrsnrub9780
      @mrsnrub9780 Před rokem +2

      @@starvictory7079 Precisely. I actually block-in/underpaint in multiple colours, particularly in still-life work when things can become complicated. Not only do I have nice complementary/reflex tones to play with, I also have a natural colour coding system.
      Neutral stains work well for me when I'm painting tonal landscapes. When I have a street scene on my hands, I do my preliminary drawings in terre verte (low tint power, which means it's easy to wipe off if I mess up.)
      Basically, the more tools in your bag, the better. Maybe not when you're in the very early stages of learning, but when you're competent - which I suspect that you are, it's time to fly solo and figure what works for YOU. That's ultimately how artists are created.

    • @mrsnrub9780
      @mrsnrub9780 Před rokem +2

      @@starvictory7079 Oh, and greetings from London!

  • @huntsail3727
    @huntsail3727 Před rokem +2

    Great information, I can only paint in an apartment now, and solvents are simply not possible. Thanks

  • @nancyw8866
    @nancyw8866 Před rokem +1

    I'm new to painting... We use mineral spirits to clean the brushes while we work. It is the odorless variety. Are you saying not to use that? We clean the brushes with Murphy's Oil Soap.

  • @gorgi__
    @gorgi__ Před rokem +8

    personally i like the smell of the toxic fumes lmao

    • @Expressionistix
      @Expressionistix Před rokem +3

      Turpentine is the best smell. All the "safe" stuff smells bad.

    • @howlingwaters2741
      @howlingwaters2741 Před rokem

      🤪

    • @hardstyle3196
      @hardstyle3196 Před rokem +1

      Read Dr Daniel G Amen's "Change Your Brain, Change Your Life" book all about brain health. Specifically the parts where he talks about solvents

  • @jonasmunkesloft9245
    @jonasmunkesloft9245 Před rokem +2

    When will it be possible to get the Geneva paint shipped to EU again 😣 ...

  • @r.rodriguez4991
    @r.rodriguez4991 Před rokem

    What about water mixable oils for a foundation or underpainting?

  • @squarz
    @squarz Před rokem +5

    Just use colors that are not too much oily (for instance rembrandt and geneva are FULL of oil, Old Holland are stiffer), use linseed oil to dilute them if needed or use them from the tube without any problem. Use mineral earth pigments and fast drying pigments and you can dry a painting over night, and it's enough for almost everyone, if you do like this there is no solvent in any step of this process. (I stain my paintings with umbers and some linseed oil and they are ready the day after).

    • @squarz
      @squarz Před rokem +3

      @J.Shelby it's used since centuries

    • @squarz
      @squarz Před rokem +1

      @J.Shelby walnut oil is not tested long term, it seems it has cracking problems poppy seed oil is not even studied, every oil has his disadvantages but we pretty much know what are the problems of flaxseed oil and even if it tends to yellow it gets its tone pretty soon and it keeps his stability for centuries, we still don't know what will happen to other modern oils, you can check on rublev's channel they have a lot of info on this topic (and they only use linseed oil IRC)

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem +1

      @J.Shelby Another example of making up problems. Anyway most artist should focus more on whether their paitings will leave a toxic residue when they are burned.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem +1

      @J.Shelby Traditional techniques were not always toxic as far as the oils used. Pigments were a horror show. But it was science that messed everything up in order to create products that dried really fast, and other goals. One of the routes to low toxic high durability paintings is to follow old methods. This is a new trend with several people offering seminars.
      Here is Kitts' teaser video, on old solvent free techniques:
      czcams.com/video/Ka6sTS94xns/video.html

    • @milanoslzla4710
      @milanoslzla4710 Před rokem +2

      I prefer walnut oil as a painting medium.

  • @Jfyhdg67
    @Jfyhdg67 Před měsícem

    Can you please tell me is winsor Newton paint are toxic?

  • @mmca9323
    @mmca9323 Před rokem +1

    Eco-solve is a soybean oms replacer.ive used it for years, it's expensive but perfect! 100% non toxic, not good for a first wash though. Using oms gave me terrible headaches so I had to find a non toxic alternative.

    • @e.g.1218
      @e.g.1218 Před rokem

      I've used it too as well in the past, for both paintings and under paintings and as a brush cleaner. However, the general consensus on Wet Canvas it seems is that it is not trustworthy in the painting. The questionable issue I guess being drying time. Although in my expereince it dries fine on canvas, some were saying it is an issue that it does not evaporate on a surface like glass for long periods. A couple of other recommended methods I've heard online from a couple artists are to just use pure oil paint rubbed out onto the canvas/ a very thin layer for the underlayer. Or chalk and linseed oil. The downside to I think would be that straight paint without solvent takes longer to dry.
      In Tad Spurgeon's the Living Craft he has a chart of the safest underpainting/ layering systems under the section Fat Over Lean. He took his site down but another artist has it up for free download on their site.
      Per his book :
      Safest system:
      " Thin water-based or lean tempera on
      a slightly absorbent
      ground" then a middle layer of "thin tempera
      grassa, or thin oil
      paint rubbed out or
      used with chalk and
      solvent
      " and a final layer of "oil paint with minimal
      added thickness and
      minimal saturating and
      sequestering medium"
      A second safe system listed as : An underlayer of "thin oil paint on a
      slightly absorbent
      ground rubbed out
      or used with a little
      solvent and chalk, and then a middle layer of "
      Straight oil paint
      with any extra
      thickness removed
      with a knife or rag
      ," with a final layer of "oil paint with minimal
      added thickness and
      minimal added saturating
      and sequestering
      medium."
      The chart also lists unsafe examples. It sounds like those are not necessarily wet into wet, but I imagine they could still work as under-layers.

  • @chelseamurray1678
    @chelseamurray1678 Před 8 dny

    How would you clean the brushes?

  • @KristinaBailey-iu6ve
    @KristinaBailey-iu6ve Před 4 měsíci

    Is it true that mixing oils into paint makes it very long to dry? (Weeks to months)

  • @BlackKettleRanch
    @BlackKettleRanch Před rokem +3

    Do you think that walnut oil and the like has a shelf and can go rancid? If so, how does one tell when it's time to throw it out? Thanks.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem +2

      If it isn't nasty it is probably OK. Bigger problem is if it has vitamin e added (which artist grade will not). Anti Oxidants like E stop drying. Sometimes people who travel end up buying locally available stuff.

    • @BlackKettleRanch
      @BlackKettleRanch Před rokem

      @@HondoTrailside Good to know. Thank you.

  • @carollopez3991
    @carollopez3991 Před rokem +1

    What is the best way to clean brushes between colors? I use vegetable oil sometimes; however, it doesn’t strip all the color out as well as a solvent would do. I can’t quite see myself cleaning brushes in dish soap (between colors), but…maybe!

  • @kefkazeromus91
    @kefkazeromus91 Před rokem +1

    I use gamsol for my wash. It evaporates slowly and is odorless. You don't need much so you won't be exposed to any fumes. Its the safest bet for a thinner.

    • @cherylannhillsartist
      @cherylannhillsartist Před rokem

      check the ingredients and safety warnings on your gamsol. It is a toxic substance and even though its odorless it still evaporates toxic fumes that you could potentially inhale.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem +3

      Gamsol just smells better, it is not guaranteed safe.

  • @neilasthana8925
    @neilasthana8925 Před rokem +1

    Any thoughts about Lavender Spike Oil as a solvent as a substitute for mineral spirits?

    • @pierreclaudelpaintings
      @pierreclaudelpaintings Před rokem +4

      I considered this at some point when I first started, and I didn't try it for various reasons : 1. it is quite expensive, 2. people were commenting they got sick of the smell of lavender which is very strong, 3. Mark Carder explains in a video that you don't need any solvents to paint. So I started to paint only with oil. Even on large canvas pure paint is fine. other than paint, I use safflower oil, and stand oil. I don't need to speed up drying time. If I didn't have headaches using odorless mineral spirits, I would probably use it sometimes, to help spread paint on large area or getting a different visual effect, but I don't miss it at all, once I ve learned to paint without. The versatility of oil paint is the only thing I need : adding layers over dry paint, or blending with fresh paint. using the thickness of stand oil, or diluting with a bit of safflower oil to decrease the concentration of pigments. using a lot of paint, or just add a touch ... etc

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem

      Far too expensive though that is not a problem for some. The guy you want to look into for that product is Marc Dalassio. He has a YT channel and he has good reasons for using his LSO medium.

    • @e.g.1218
      @e.g.1218 Před rokem +1

      Lavender Spike Oil had the same problematic compounds in it a Turpentine and other solvents healthwise. I bought some from Chelsea Studio and it is really, really strong even in open air. It's not real pure Lavender Spike Oil but synthesized version.

  • @vegardr5333
    @vegardr5333 Před rokem

    turpentine always makes me sick, now i use milk paint citrus solvent for thinning the paint and to make it dry quicker, its labeled as non toxic and it seems to behave similar to turpentine and mineral spirits.

  • @sorryrocco
    @sorryrocco Před rokem

    Been painting in oils since a young age 40 years + and to be honest never has a problem with fumes, the oils colours have a mild linseed sent as does my boiled linseed oil, the final varnish is mild too, i only varnish after about 8-12 months anyway, as for cleaning brushes with white spirit and turpentine i dont use it, i use fairy washing up liquid or decent bar of soap with red hot water.

  • @RMHVids
    @RMHVids Před rokem +2

    What’s the best way to dispose of oil paint, mediums, and solvents? I’ve been painting once a week at a local art school for a couple months and it only dawned on me now that throwing away paint and dumping Turpenoid into the large sink in the classroom are probably not good things to be doing 😓

    • @UbiquitousBooks
      @UbiquitousBooks Před rokem

      Your local recycling/refuse processing centre should be able to accept these kinds of toxic substances. But you might need to throw away less that you think.
      You can store solvent in a brush cleaner or sealed jar and reuse it between sessions. Once it gets a bit dirty, let it sit in its container for a few days and you should find that all of the solvent settles on the bottom. Pour the clean solvent off the top into a second container and it's ready for reuse. The dirty pigment is left at the bottom of the first container and you can clean this up with a rag and leave the rag outdoors for the solvent to evaporate, leaving only the pigment behind. If you follow this procedure then you should find that there's very little solvent to recycle because it either evaporated or is used up in your painting process.
      As Mark said in the video, *most* oil paints are non-toxic and don't require special recycling measures. But you should be aware of any toxic pigments you use (e.g., cadmiums) and arrange for them to be recycled.

    • @HondoTrailside
      @HondoTrailside Před rokem

      @@UbiquitousBooks I agree, though, they say that none of (most?) of the cadmiums used in paints today are toxic either.
      Brushes don't need to be cleaned, there are many ways to achieve this. Mark has videos.

    • @peggysterling57
      @peggysterling57 Před rokem

      I can't imagine putting turpentine in a sink. But I don't use it. My left over acrylic goes on newspaper or poured into a tall plastic container where it evaporates in my garage. I'm hoping not to have much waste from my new water mixable oils. Most cities have hazardous waste once/year for paint, batteries, light bulbs, etc.

    • @kerryb5984
      @kerryb5984 Před 6 měsíci

      pour into a container of sand kept for this purpose. An art school should NOT be allowing students to tip chemicals down the sink!

  • @sorryrocco
    @sorryrocco Před rokem

    Theirs also plenty of odourless decorators spirit available (uk)

  • @genreartwithjb5095
    @genreartwithjb5095 Před 3 měsíci

    Toxic fumes are what make it fun!

  • @linvest8466
    @linvest8466 Před rokem +7

    How do you feel about using a thin wash of colored acrylic to cover the canvas before painting with oil? Acrylics don’t give off poisonous fumes.

    • @chrisgriffith1573
      @chrisgriffith1573 Před rokem +3

      As with oil and mineral spirits, acrylics lose their integrity as you thin them down with water. It is always best to use washes at recommended ratios, and if you are using acrylic, why thin it down at all? If you need it to retain a good adhesion for the oil above, use some pumice or other such flattening agent to roughen the paint surface so as to retain porous nature for paint adhesion.

    • @nathanielovaughn2145
      @nathanielovaughn2145 Před rokem

      Neither do oils.

    • @jackmaxwell3134
      @jackmaxwell3134 Před rokem

      Do you know the ingredients of acrylic? Toxic ingredients such as cobalt, manganese, cadmium, chromium, and lead. Since they are into a medium (water based), evidently they DO give off in the fumes.

    • @starvictory7079
      @starvictory7079 Před rokem

      @@jackmaxwell3134 Not toxic in the EU. Buy cadmium hue etc.

    • @vermis8344
      @vermis8344 Před rokem

      @@nathanielovaughn2145 They do when they're thinned down with solvents, which is the whole point.

  • @howlingwaters2741
    @howlingwaters2741 Před rokem +1

    Waiting on my Genevas, @DrawMixPaint @MarkCarder👩🏼‍🎨😁

  • @bohotsai9386
    @bohotsai9386 Před rokem

    Mark Carder大哥酷

  • @zunairahlatif5254
    @zunairahlatif5254 Před rokem +1

    But how to clean brushes during paint session ?

  • @genreartwithjb5095
    @genreartwithjb5095 Před 3 měsíci

    But in all seriousness that’s why a lot general public use studios steer clear of anchoring their educational programs with oil painting classes. The one studio I teach in uses water soluble

  • @jaqstitch
    @jaqstitch Před rokem

    How do you layer Geneva paint?

    • @djo-dji6018
      @djo-dji6018 Před rokem +1

      He paints alla prima, Geneva paints are very slow drying.

  • @jensschettler1732
    @jensschettler1732 Před rokem +1

    Simply paint with a knife. Then you have it. No messing around with dirty mixtures cause the brush was not clean. Nothing. Pure joy of painting.

    • @abcd-wg2iq
      @abcd-wg2iq Před 5 měsíci

      Knife has its problems, it can never be gentle as a brush. Good luck getting something soft

  • @debramoss2267
    @debramoss2267 Před rokem +1

    Thankfully I can't use solvents, which I wouldn't have said before watching your video. Thank you.

  • @truckerdaddy-akajohninqueb4793

    I still think about Bob Ross

  • @connorttt-yc5uv
    @connorttt-yc5uv Před 9 měsíci +1

    I just use linseed start to finish

  • @23thkr
    @23thkr Před 19 dny

    Or you could use water soluble oil paint for your underpainting stage

  • @lesliel1182
    @lesliel1182 Před rokem +1

    What about cleaning out the brushes while you're painting? That's where the toxicity lies, wiping the brush dry with paper towels. I had to quit using oils for that reason.

    • @djo-dji6018
      @djo-dji6018 Před rokem +2

      There is nothing toxic about wiping a brush with a towel.

  • @misaelortega653
    @misaelortega653 Před rokem

    Can't you just use guesso with an acrylic color for the base? Instead of having to worry about toxic fumes

  • @truckerdaddy-akajohninqueb4793

    What about beating your brush?

  • @AzureSymbiote
    @AzureSymbiote Před 4 měsíci

    Just keep your turpentine covered while painting. This reduces toxicity by a considerable amount.

  • @rickysargulesh1053
    @rickysargulesh1053 Před rokem +1

    I wish there was this video before I bought all that toxic stuff like mineral spirits and venetian turpentine.

  • @jackmaxwell3134
    @jackmaxwell3134 Před rokem +1

    And we don't speak about other arts like sculpture for example! Modelling clays are toxic synthetic materials to the touch (despite the "clay" in the name, nothing natural in that!) and even more at the moment of baking them to rigidity them, releasing fumes but people still using it massively.

  • @retolop
    @retolop Před 5 měsíci

    Nice . But you haven't spoken about cleaning your brushes during the procedure. You know, thinner and other liquid and its fumes !!!
    Painting with oil paints needs a ventilated place

  • @andyhuwe8462
    @andyhuwe8462 Před rokem +1

    Mark, youre on the safer track to just tell everything is toxic.