I have an Army Painter one for my regular paints, and I use a DIY one for my metallic paints and "speed" or "contrast" paints. They can deposit metals and mediums into your main paints and contaminate them.
I haven’t had that issue and I have used speedpaints and metallics along with regular acrylics all in the same palette for over two years now. So I’m not sure what would cause that.
Hi. The side doesn’t really matter, but the type of parchment paper does. I only use the brown kind shown here (unwaxed?). The white one doesn’t work well at all.
What brand is the parchment paper from? I recently just got the reynolds baking parchment...but afraid it might be nonstick which would have a coating on them
I like to use the lid rather than the bottom. Very handy, cheap wet pallette!
Yeah I’ve see folks use the lid too. I may try that. It’s probably pretty similar.
Exactly what I needed and very well explained.
Thank you very much!!! Works very well 👍👍👍🌟
Very welcome!
I have an Army Painter one for my regular paints, and I use a DIY one for my metallic paints and "speed" or "contrast" paints. They can deposit metals and mediums into your main paints and contaminate them.
I haven’t had that issue and I have used speedpaints and metallics along with regular acrylics all in the same palette for over two years now. So I’m not sure what would cause that.
What side of the parchment paper do you put face up/down?
Hi. The side doesn’t really matter, but the type of parchment paper does. I only use the brown kind shown here (unwaxed?). The white one doesn’t work well at all.
@@no.6minis good to note, I had been using white with varying results
What brand is the parchment paper from? I recently just got the reynolds baking parchment...but afraid it might be nonstick which would have a coating on them
The brand is less important but you want the brown colored one like I’m showing. It’s called “unbleached”. The white ones don’t work well.
@@no.6minisi didnt even know that white ones existed