Learning so much about colour from your tutorials. Not only do you tell us what colours to use and how to mix them, you also explain when, why and how to use them. Thanks 👍
Everytime I click I see myself improved We maybe different with painting styles But still same U teach me about my mistakes Thanks my friend Keep posting more 😊 Stay safe and inside ✌🏻 Love from India ❤️
Delightful ,,, thanks for posting, I really enjoyed painting this little scene the way you talked viewers through the process was very informative. I'm retired and I so enjoy my oil painting, I have plenty of time to spend at my easel ( now that my golf season is over ). I've learned from what you have posted here, thanks again ,, take care.
Absolutely gorgeous painting Karim. I only use acrylic but this lesson helps me with the colour mixtures and the details. Fabulous tutorial as always. 🥰🏆
Believe it or not, I started that painting in acrylics and I wasn’t happy with it and I wasn’t even finished! I’d didn’t know what to do and at the last minute I decided to do it in oils! And was late at night so I couldn’t narrate for a video, and it took a little long! So that’s why!
I wouldn’t do it, I was asked that question, and that was my response! Despite the fact that some have tried it by using small amounts, you can’t be constant in adding small quantities and may add more than needed sometimes and you could ruin a painting! Like I said to another poster, they make water mixable drying agents, so why mess with traditional paint driers! There’s a reason why your painting with WMO’s.
Great Video! Have you tried using Liquin Original with water mixable paints such as Winsor & Newton Artisan? If you have tried it, did you change the way you clean your brushes? I imagine you might not be able to clean up with dish washing liquid.
Hi James, you can’t use Liquin with WMO’s because Liquin is solvent based!! What you can use is “Artisan fast drying medium” from Winsor&Newton. In either case you can use dish soap such as dawn to clean your brushes!
Silke Kirch FineArt as long as it’s water mixable, the brand doesn’t matter! Cobra water mixable oils has a fast dryer to and can be used with Winsor&Newton Artisan paints, but you can not use Liquin!!! It’s a petroleum based solvent.
Beautiful painting and you are a great teacher! I just subscribed! 😊. If I may ask what did you sign your name with? That’s the part I hate. Signing with a brush.
You can start with Gamblin 1980 series, no smell, spreads easy, and overall a great paint brand, also Lukas 1862, great paint for the money, it has beeswax in the paint and helps it dry quicker than other oil paints, and great spread ability!! I think these are my 2 preferred so far, and easy on your wallet!
Fat over lean this refers to the oil content of the paint not it's thickness . If you paint a layer containing less oil over a layer that contains more oil the leaner layer will dry faster than the underneath layer the underneath layer will continue to move as it dries thus there is great risk of the upper layer cracking. With oils if they appear dry they may actually still be moving and shrinking as they dry for a long time... thank you for the beautiful work you do much enjoyed
Thank you Lucia!! That first sentence cuts two ways and arrives at the same result. What I mean by that is: yes, the first layer has to be thin so as to dry faster then the subsequent layers, but here is the kicker, we are both right about the subsequent layers but in different ways! Oil paints contain a certain amount of linseed oil mixed with the paint coming out of the tube. So yes , if you add a thicker layer which will have a proportionally higher content of oil than than the previous layer, will take longer to dry compare to the previous layer. Comparatively, your subsequent layer can have a little less paint but more oil content and still arrive at the same conclusion, and not have the upper layer crack! I hope that wasn’t confusing! So basically what I’m saying is more paint will proportionally contain more oil than the previous layer, so it comes out to the same thing in the end.
Hi Roxanne, I used both a filbert and a flat, and yes, the hairs are close together. They are great brushes, love the feel when applying paint!! They can hold a lot of paint as well.
Hi Paul, I am mixing the liquin with my paints but only from time to time! I don’t use it throughout the entire painting, only if I need to move the paint or I need a particular area to tack up quicker!
Thank you!! I never had a problem with Liquin, just clean your brush in Gamsol and your session is over just clean your brush with dawn soap and water!
You would need fodder and plus the amount of linseed used in a painting is insignificant! Plus being that the painting surface is opened to air will not precipitate any heat . You would need a good amount of linseed oil on rag bunched up tightly to create any heat, and even then, it would need a good amount of time to ignite on its own without an source of ignition! So simply put, short of using linseed oil for a torch, there’s no need to tell people that linseed will ignite their paintings at some point, if that were the case no solvents of any kind would be used for painting! But thank you for your input and concern!
LORD JESUS (YESHUA) WIN ON CROSS FOR US 🙏 (Isaiah 53) , (Psalms 22) and (Zechariah 12 : 10) ! Explanation for Church Rapture (Thessalonians 4 : 16-17) will be alien Invasion on Earth 🌍 ! Read Bible and Be ready / We are Last generation .
Learning so much about colour from your tutorials. Not only do you tell us what colours to use and how to mix them, you also explain when, why and how to use them. Thanks 👍
My pleasure, thank you for watching my videos, it helps!!
Thank you so very much for your spectacular paintings you’re really talented and a wonderful teacher ❤
Thank you very much!!!
This was wonderful to watch 😊 thank you
Thank you very much Elsa!!!
Stunning. Thank you for sharing
My pleasure!!
Everytime I click I see myself improved
We maybe different with painting styles
But still same
U teach me about my mistakes
Thanks my friend
Keep posting more 😊
Stay safe and inside ✌🏻
Love from India ❤️
Thank you Anish!!!
Thank you. Your teaching was very easy to follow and your colors lovely.
Thank you very much for the compliment!!!
And we have another winner 🏆 beautiful painting 🎨
Thank you very much Edward!!!
Delightful ,,, thanks for posting, I really enjoyed painting this little scene the way you talked viewers through the process was very informative. I'm retired and I so enjoy my oil painting, I have plenty of time to spend at my easel ( now that my golf season is over ). I've learned from what you have posted here, thanks again ,, take care.
That is awesome, I’m really glad you enjoyed it!! Click the notification button because I have a new one coming which I think you’ll enjoy!!
Beautiful piece...wonderful lesson...very nice color mixing...that's what makes an artists work standout...great tips throughout.
Thank you very much Raffah!!!
As always, a great painting and well explained.
Thank you Paul!!!
Beautiful,love it !thank you !
Thank you Fiona!!!
Absolutely beautiful
Thank you Suresh!!!
Thank you for posting this. Very helpful! And lovely work!
Thank you Alannah!!!
Beautiful! Great tutorial!
Thank you Jackie!!!
Absolutely gorgeous painting Karim. I only use acrylic but this lesson helps me with the colour mixtures and the details. Fabulous tutorial as always. 🥰🏆
Thank you Julie, anytime!!
Beautiful Landscape! Thanks dear
Thank you Glauci!!!
Lovely, thank you for that! Really enjoyed the video.
Thank you!!!
Hurray!!! I can't wait to try this one, it's beautiful. Thank you Karim. I love oils!!
Hi Susan, thank you for following me!! I’ll work on others!!
@@GebahiArtworks Wonderful! I'll look forward to that!
Clearly showed colors mixing...great work
Thank you very much!!!
Lovely colours!
Thank you Mooshibe!!!
Great tutorial, very helpful, thanks so much i'll try it soon. Wish you all the best 👍
Thank you very much!!!
Awesome .
I like it very much.
Thanks.
I'm glad you like it!!!
👏👏👏👏👏Maestro!!!
Thank you Julia!!!
You explain very well
Thank you very much Carin!!! I just saw your comment!
Another good one !
Thank you!!!
Thank you....😍
Anytime Dhea!!!
Gonna try one like this because of the colors. Looks like I could do this. But then again that's what I always say.
Just go for it Clay, you got nothing to lose and everything to gain just from experience alone!!
Sorry for the late response by the way !!
Would love to have seen a video on the Rose's from your IG...beautiful!
Believe it or not, I started that painting in acrylics and I wasn’t happy with it and I wasn’t even finished! I’d didn’t know what to do and at the last minute I decided to do it in oils! And was late at night so I couldn’t narrate for a video, and it took a little long! So that’s why!
Very good , Brasil
Obrigado!!!
As always, a wealth of information in this video. One question, will Liquin work with water soluable oils?
I wouldn’t do it, I was asked that question, and that was my response! Despite the fact that some have tried it by using small amounts, you can’t be constant in adding small quantities and may add more than needed sometimes and you could ruin a painting! Like I said to another poster, they make water mixable drying agents, so why mess with traditional paint driers! There’s a reason why your painting with WMO’s.
Great Video! Have you tried using Liquin Original with water mixable paints such as Winsor & Newton Artisan? If you have tried it, did you change the way you clean your brushes? I imagine you might not be able to clean up with dish washing liquid.
Hi James, you can’t use Liquin with WMO’s because Liquin is solvent based!! What you can use is “Artisan fast drying medium” from Winsor&Newton. In either case you can use dish soap such as dawn to clean your brushes!
Great tutorial! I was wondering what Liquin would be when one uses watermixable oils.
There is a drying medium for water mixable oils! One I can think of off the top of my head is: Artisan fast drying medium by Winsor&Newton!
@@GebahiArtworks thanks. So any fast drying medium would do the job? I have one from Cobra.
Silke Kirch FineArt as long as it’s water mixable, the brand doesn’t matter! Cobra water mixable oils has a fast dryer to and can be used with Winsor&Newton Artisan paints, but you can not use Liquin!!! It’s a petroleum based solvent.
Beautiful painting and you are a great teacher! I just subscribed! 😊. If I may ask what did you sign your name with? That’s the part I hate. Signing with a brush.
Thank you Deanne, I used a liner brush! A # 1/0
What is a good beginner oil paint to start with. One with no smell as I am allergic to strong odors.
You can start with Gamblin 1980 series, no smell, spreads easy, and overall a great paint brand, also Lukas 1862, great paint for the money, it has beeswax in the paint and helps it dry quicker than other oil paints, and great spread ability!! I think these are my 2 preferred so far, and easy on your wallet!
What again was the brush you were using? I have been painting only 4-5 years and learning there is a different in brushes. Thanks Ann
Lol! It must be the Princeton Polytip Catalyst series brush, they have a nice feel to them when painting.
Fat over lean this refers to the oil content of the paint not it's thickness . If you paint a layer containing less oil over a layer that contains more oil the leaner layer will dry faster than the underneath layer the underneath layer will continue to move as it dries thus there is great risk of the upper layer cracking. With oils if they appear dry they may actually still be moving and shrinking as they dry for a long time... thank you for the beautiful work you do much enjoyed
Thank you Lucia!! That first sentence cuts two ways and arrives at the same result. What I mean by that is: yes, the first layer has to be thin so as to dry faster then the subsequent layers, but here is the kicker, we are both right about the subsequent layers but in different ways! Oil paints contain a certain amount of linseed oil mixed with the paint coming out of the tube. So yes , if you add a thicker layer which will have a proportionally higher content of oil than than the previous layer, will take longer to dry compare to the previous layer. Comparatively, your subsequent layer can have a little less paint but more oil content and still arrive at the same conclusion, and not have the upper layer crack! I hope that wasn’t confusing! So basically what I’m saying is more paint will proportionally contain more oil than the previous layer, so it comes out to the same thing in the end.
Is the poly tip brush a filbert? Is it a title brush. Are the hairs close together ? Thanks for teaching
Hi Roxanne, I used both a filbert and a flat, and yes, the hairs are close together. They are great brushes, love the feel when applying paint!! They can hold a lot of paint as well.
how would you do this in acrylic? is it even possible?
Yes, it’s possible Sam! Here is one I did , similar:
ua-cam.com/video/RI9R42UdFUM/v-deo.html
Am I seeing you dip into the liquin and not mixed into your paints? I thought it should be mixed in. Thx
Hi Paul, I am mixing the liquin with my paints but only from time to time! I don’t use it throughout the entire painting, only if I need to move the paint or I need a particular area to tack up quicker!
Why do you sometimes use acrylics and sometimes oils why not one medium great painting
I mainly paint in acrylics but sometimes I like painting with oils, depends on my mood and I like to offer a variety to my viewers!
@@GebahiArtworks thankyou that's clear now
What camera are you using to record your videos?
iPhone 11 Pro Max!
Thanks
Breitling MXS-R anytime!!!
good job but....warning to anybody that plans on using Liquin ... it will destroy your brushes and it the smell is pretty intense
Thank you!! I never had a problem with Liquin, just clean your brush in Gamsol and your session is over just clean your brush with dawn soap and water!
Please, when instructing students to use linseed oil, be sure to tell them, that linseed oil is subject to self-igniting.
You would need fodder and plus the amount of linseed used in a painting is insignificant! Plus being that the painting surface is opened to air will not precipitate any heat . You would need a good amount of linseed oil on rag bunched up tightly to create any heat, and even then, it would need a good amount of time to ignite on its own without an source of ignition! So simply put, short of using linseed oil for a torch, there’s no need to tell people that linseed will ignite their paintings at some point, if that were the case no solvents of any kind would be used for painting! But thank you for your input and concern!
LORD JESUS (YESHUA) WIN ON CROSS FOR US 🙏 (Isaiah 53) , (Psalms 22) and (Zechariah 12 : 10) ! Explanation for Church Rapture (Thessalonians 4 : 16-17) will be alien Invasion on Earth 🌍 ! Read Bible and Be ready / We are Last generation .