My Natural Pigments Colour Palette

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • An in depth look at the colours I use. For more information about the content of this video, including a paint list, visit my blog post: paintingstuffto...
    Did you guys notice the old art school calcium carbonate and razor blade prank? Thanks a lot Dave.
    Don't forget to visit my websites, paintingstuffto...
    and www.katestonear...

Комментарии • 64

  • @BigDaddyZakk420
    @BigDaddyZakk420 6 лет назад +2

    I love that neutral, half tone black.
    I might have to grab a tube of that, I've never tried it out.

  • @melblack7412
    @melblack7412 8 лет назад +2

    Randomly found this video looking for natural ways to make paint. I then looked at your artwork--Your work is so beautiful! Haha, your still-lifes before you paint them are totally creepy, but you truly do make them so beautiful.

  • @dominicberry5577
    @dominicberry5577 3 года назад +1

    Very interesting and useful talk. I buy Rublev and it’s great to get tips on how to play with them.

  • @sionedsart337
    @sionedsart337 Год назад

    Gorgeous colours ❤ and I adore your artwork..

  • @MrInterestingthings
    @MrInterestingthings 4 года назад

    This is great! Your knowledge about the actualchemical materials really gave me somethings to think about ! Your tips about where you're putting paints on palette and manganese content for drying . Wow! I took 3 painting courses learned more taking notes here after 2 viewing than more than a year. I've read books and somehow this is going to work for me better.

  • @dont-want-no-wrench
    @dont-want-no-wrench Год назад +1

    rublev is good stuff, and i admire their effort.

  • @jetsonjoe
    @jetsonjoe 8 лет назад

    Excellent! Love your paintings. Hopefully someday I can get out to B.C. to Duncan to take a workshop...would love that.
    As well love Dave's paintings...really appreciate the both of you and your generosity in sharing your information.
    Thanks from Ottawa.

  • @bozmundarts2614
    @bozmundarts2614 2 года назад +1

    i use m graham, but if a specific color has oil separation, i just shake the tube until it doesnt

    • @Iwanttodrawachicken
      @Iwanttodrawachicken Месяц назад +1

      Tried shaking my m graham today. Cannot believe how well this works.
      Life changing tip. Thank you!

  • @TobermoryCat
    @TobermoryCat 3 года назад

    I saw a good painter sporting a single tube of Lukas 1862 black. When you mentioned black being a slow drying colour the penny dropped - Lukas paint dries quick.

  • @Vermiliontea
    @Vermiliontea 7 лет назад +22

    I stopped painting with oils 30 years ago, but I just happened to surf into this video. And I feel I have to make a comment. Most of the colors you're using are excellent, outstanding choices, but Chrome Yellow and Madder Lake? Chrome Yellow is toxic, carcinogenic and an environmental problem. To top it off, it's not very permanent. As some van Gogh paintings unfortunately show, it darkens and turns greenish. Cadmium Yellow is vastly superior in every way. Madder and Alizarin Lakes are also not durable. Particularly not when you're just tinting flesh tones. It can be replaced with a Quinacridon paint. White Lead was still around back in the days when I was still painting oil. I loved the stuff and it's permanent, so I'm not saying anything. It's supposed to be toxic too, but it's also the good white.

    • @Vermiliontea
      @Vermiliontea 7 лет назад +3

      For humans, there's a lot of difference in toxicity between Lead white and Cadmium. By comparison, cadmium is harmless. The worry comes from that it accumulates. And it's not just eating and inhaling. Repeated skin contact is not good either. If you clean your brushes by working them with soap against the palm of your hand, as I did when I was young and stupid, you'll also get trouble. But regardless, it can be handled safely. Then you make two impossible generalizations. What do you mean by "lead based paints"? House and boat oil paints made with white or red Lead? In the context of artist paints there are only three good Lead pigments: Lead White, Lead Tin Yellow and Naples Yellow. And only in oil medium. The rest, including Chrome Yellow, is crap. I wouldn't even paint a bicycle with it. And many of the Lead pigments, including Chrome Yellow again, happen to be "modern synthetic pigments". As for other modern synthetic pigments, some of them are phenomenally, unbelievably good. We live in an interesting technological age, you know. It's not just smartphones, you know.

    • @ldeder1
      @ldeder1 6 лет назад

      Vermiliontea b

    • @dynomax101
      @dynomax101 6 лет назад +1

      Miguel Angel Bevia Ruiz And many artists died way younger than normal because of toxic pigments use. Back in the "good old days" artists had fewer pigment choices, but we have many times the choices available today. I'm for what works, but I see no reason to use toxic pigments--I mean really toxic pigments--if safer pigments more than meet my artistic and permanence means.
      Lead is a naturally occurring element, true, but so is fluorine. If pure fluorine could be used as a paint--it can't--it would make lead seem like mama's milk. Would you use it and think it's safe because it's "naturally occurring"? Use what you wish, but history backs up my claims.
      And hoping artists won't accidentally ingest paint is good, but useless. It happens, believe me.

    • @GLYNDYER
      @GLYNDYER 4 года назад +1

      dynomax101 which artists have died through miss use of oil paint?

    • @josquinelburg74
      @josquinelburg74 4 года назад

      @@GLYNDYER Rubens supposedly got gout because of Lead white. Got so bad he couldn't even use his right hand to paint anymore and he switched to painting with his left hand. But yeah, I mean, Titian painted with lead white rubbing it with his hands and he lived to great old age

  • @dont-want-no-wrench
    @dont-want-no-wrench Год назад

    rublev doesnt add stabilizers to the paint, that's why there is some oil separation

  • @vuton7670
    @vuton7670 7 лет назад +9

    oh god, i've been holding it wrong all these years. lol

  • @cisp360
    @cisp360 Год назад

    Do they traditionally make indian yellow, using cows and mango leaves?

  • @Artinstruction4u
    @Artinstruction4u 6 лет назад

    Thanks for the video. You can tip your tubes back and forth before you open them to keep that oil from coming out first.

  • @philippecolin151
    @philippecolin151 8 лет назад +4

    are you always that speedy? so stressful :-)

  • @nickfanzo
    @nickfanzo 5 лет назад

    You can make your own sun thickened linseed oil and that will make your paint dry fast.

  • @neryharnish1717
    @neryharnish1717 8 лет назад +1

    How can u really see the colors with so dark a palette? Great video, hope there's more..I am subscribing!

  • @overseezer
    @overseezer 8 лет назад +4

    Awesome video! How do you keep your palette so slick and clean?

  • @Expressionistix
    @Expressionistix 7 лет назад +1

    I learned my lesson: my mentor who was a professor of art at WSU - who had studied in France and took classes with Picasso made much much more intricate, sophisticated, and intellectual paintings than I could ever do using the cheapest student grade oil paint. I had the expensive crap and quickly realized it was just a waste of money.

  • @krisvojna7269
    @krisvojna7269 5 лет назад +1

    I like the palette. Could you please tell me where you got it from?

  • @steppythegirl
    @steppythegirl 7 лет назад

    They do still sell the madder lake, i have that one!

  • @johnhowe8264
    @johnhowe8264 6 лет назад

    your brass is ok but your gold lack the touch of green that gold needs. try using secondary colours: viridian green plus orange plus yellow pale. also try prussian blue plus orange and yellow. think of gold as a secondary colour made from primary colours orange and green.

  • @jetsonjoe
    @jetsonjoe 7 лет назад

    Oleogel, versus other mediums? why this one...and the Velasquz medium versus others...just curious and learning.

  • @gkspain1
    @gkspain1 5 лет назад

    Great chat, have subscribed, all the best Garry

  • @lovelycorinne
    @lovelycorinne 6 лет назад +2

    What's the razor and powder on his palette? Is that how one paints so long. Lol

  • @merrileatherwood2992
    @merrileatherwood2992 7 лет назад +1

    I like the American Gothic pic, and I had a pet chicken as a child, they're surprisingly sweet animals. I wish I could have another but a have a cat and two dogs.

  • @jsprite123
    @jsprite123 5 лет назад

    Thank you for the video, very informative!

  • @westghost1452
    @westghost1452 7 лет назад

    love the video and information, thank you

  • @lisengel2498
    @lisengel2498 6 лет назад

    Thankyou for sharing your palet. It is sometimes difficult to understand what you say because you talk so fast e.g. What was the name of the ochre that you preferred? I tried to listen three times but I could not get it

    • @lawrencebeck4777
      @lawrencebeck4777 5 лет назад +1

      It sounded to me like "Blue Ridge Yellow Ochre" Liz. Item number is 820-3032 in the Rublev Oil Colors herea; www.naturalpigments.com/oil-painting/paints.html?p=2

  • @alangeorgebarstow
    @alangeorgebarstow 6 лет назад +1

    I make my paint 'beefier' by adding some Bovril. :•)

  • @jetsonjoe
    @jetsonjoe 7 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing. Most informative

  • @tairad687
    @tairad687 4 года назад

    Where can I find information on ordering the paints?

    • @mard9802
      @mard9802 3 года назад +1

      Natural Pigments has a website. Their oil paint line is called Rublev.

  • @oilartworks9124
    @oilartworks9124 7 лет назад

    Do synthetic pigments have Fillers?

    • @Impressio_Nisti
      @Impressio_Nisti 7 лет назад

      Oil Artworks Pigments dont have filler. They are just pigments, filler can be added into oil paint (pigment and oil) to make it cost less -> Student grade paint. Synthetic pigments are manufactured in a lab or something.

    • @oilartworks9124
      @oilartworks9124 7 лет назад

      Apina Right, I understand pigments are pigments and the difference between student grade and professional grade oil paint for value. my question was about synthetic pigments that are yes, laboratorial. I will look into it. In consideration of the process, there must be a possibility for similar differentiation concerning synthetics. This is my interest of concern when mentioning fillers for such products.

  • @nickfanzo
    @nickfanzo 5 лет назад

    Ok so technology is a good thing. We can develop colors and pigments which have a much stronger light fastness than ever. To only want to use paint, like as if it was made 200 years ago, is silly,.
    That being said Rublev makes awesome paint and I use it. But I don't see the down side to modern paint, after all we use cell phones not rotary phones.

  • @prawnstar9213
    @prawnstar9213 Год назад

    Traditionally made (but not made by monks or anything) 😆

  • @Drumaier
    @Drumaier 5 лет назад +1

    Great video thank you! ;)

  • @Kim__Tan
    @Kim__Tan 7 лет назад +6

    can you explain more slowly ?

    • @Drumaier
      @Drumaier 5 лет назад +2

      No man, not only there is no need for that but what kind of idiot are you?...asking for "more" to people who is already giving their time and sharing their experience. SMH.

    • @Drumaier
      @Drumaier 5 лет назад

      Kids these days.

    • @beckywebb1916
      @beckywebb1916 5 лет назад +1

      Drumaier J Maybe English isn’t their first language.

    • @Iwanttodrawachicken
      @Iwanttodrawachicken Месяц назад +1

      You can change the playback speed in the gear icon.

  • @Ynffy
    @Ynffy 3 года назад

    When you watch intense RUclips-clips about creamy oil paints and people hear you moan "yeah, spread it" and you have to lie and tell them you were on PornHub. Less cringe.

  • @miric6224
    @miric6224 9 месяцев назад

    Re roman black. No. Couldn’t see difference. Perhaps you should have placed it on a lighter color palette , rather than dark brown wood…and mix in white to see its tining properties. Poor demo. Please edit before publishing. You’ve got good ideas. I use rublev, love ‘em! Thank you.

    • @davidgluck2806
      @davidgluck2806 8 месяцев назад

      Ooooooh boohoo, you didn't like the editing of the free content. Go make your own videos then.

  • @bio-plasmictoad5311
    @bio-plasmictoad5311 6 лет назад

    Some times you should question authority because there might not be right for you or can hold you back.

  • @gerryarty8342
    @gerryarty8342 5 лет назад

    Cant see video.. quality of lighting poor .. :(

  • @Dawn24Michele
    @Dawn24Michele 4 года назад

    Screw all that. There only colors anyone needs are cyan, magenta and yellow. That's it. If you're into pale colors then maybe a white to dull.
    Thanks for sharing but that's a whole lot of effort for something that can be done so much more easily and inexpensively.

  • @UConceptPublishing
    @UConceptPublishing 7 лет назад +1

    too much trouble

  • @frmrusgemployeee18yrs77
    @frmrusgemployeee18yrs77 7 лет назад +3

    " I never question authority"...... Ugh! ......

    • @anapardo4827
      @anapardo4827 3 года назад

      es una forma de decir que su profesor ya sabía qué era lo mejor y se ahorra mucho tiempo probando cosas cuanto una autoridad, es decir, un buen maestro ha solucionado ese asuntol