How Your Oil Paintings
Can Flower
When you are producing flower landscape oil paintings, keep
in mind the short canvas blend life of oil paints. If you are
producing an oil painting of a flower landscape and you need to
make a change that isn't immediately effective, the best thing
to do is wipe it off with your paint rag and start over. This
will work for the first 24 hours after your painting, as oil
paintings take this long to dry. In fact, it's important not to
make too thick a first coat or you'll never get your oil paints
to dry.
One important piece of oil painting advice is to clean your
paint brushes each time you change colors. You do this by first
wiping as much paint off the brush with a rag as you possibly
can and then inserting the brush into the paint thinner. Not
only will this get more oil paints off your brush, but will
extend the life of your thinner as well. Swish your paint brush
around in the container of paint thinner, then dry it with your
clean paint rag.
When the first layer of your flower landscape oil painting
creation is finished, wait 48 hours before you start on your
second paint application or you're going to end up smearing the
work you already did. In the meantime don't leave your oil
painting somewhere hot or humid. Make sure that its location
will protect it from getting accidently scraped, smooshed,
smeared, or touched at all.
Should you have a lot of paint left on the palette and you
want to use it when you start your flower landscape oil
paintings again, scrape the paint together with your knife.
Next put a small amount of paint thinner on a cleam paint rage
and use it to clean the rest of your paint palette. Plastic
wrap is great for covering the paint that is leftover. Make
sure you wrap it tightly though.
It's important as well, that until you start again with your
flower landscape oil paintings, that you replace the lid on the
container of paint thinner and set it aside, no matter how
cloudy it looks. The paint thinner will settle and the pigment
that is part of the paint will drop to the bottom of the
container.
Clean thinner will settle at the top. The next time you go
back to your flower landscape oil paintings you'll only need to
pour that top layer of clean paint thinner into a new and clean
thinner container, and wipe the pigment off the bottom. You
then pour the good paint thinner back into its original thinner
container and you're ready to start your flower landscape oil
painting project once again.
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