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products
acrylic mediums
Clear mediums can be used to alter artist’s
acrylics in different ways to achieve different results.
We offer three clear mediums, which differ in their viscosity,
(thickness), and their sheen. Which one you choose will
depend on the effect you wish to achieve.
Acrylic fluid medium: Our
most fluid medium. Dries to a gloss sheen
Acrylic matte medium: Medium viscosity.
Dries to a matte sheen
Acrylic gel medium: Our thickest medium.
Dries to a semi-gloss sheen.
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For more information on applying medium
visit our technical
tips section.
Before they are dry, acrylic mediums appear milky-white.
When dry they become perfectly clear. They can be added
to acrylic colours without limit.
The three clear mediums have been formulated to have different
viscosities. By diluting the gel medium with water you will
create a liquid which may have the same consistency as fluid
medium, but because it will contain less resin solids it
will create a weaker and thinner film when dry.
Artist’s quality paint is formulated to have maximum
pigment loading. We put as much ground pigment in the acrylic
resin as is possible in relation to the properties of each
individual pigment. While artist’s colours can be
used straight out of the tube or jar, using a variety of
clear mediums can vastly increase the range of effects that
can be achieved. Because artist’s paint is a highly
concentrated product, clear mediums can be used to extend
the paint, to make it go further. This is especially true
when working with more expensive, high tint strength colours,
like dioxazine violet, for example. To extend the paint
without considerably altering its viscosity, matte medium
is a good choice. Adding gel medium will make the paint
slightly thicker, while fluid medium will create a fluid
paint.
Some colours are so strong in tint strength that they look
very dark, almost black, in their unaltered form. By adding
clear acrylic medium it allows the colour to be more visible
by making a more transparent film. By adding clear medium
to the paint and applying it in layers you can achieve a
depth of colour and a type of colour mixing that is not
possible in any other way. This technique is called glazing,
and is particularly effective with high tint strength, transparent
pigments like phthalos and quinacridones. Fluid medium is
suitable for use in this technique because its flow properties
allow thin, even layers to be made easily without holding
brush strokes. Because acrylic is fast drying, it is a convenient
material for this type of painting.
Artist’s colours are made up of two main ingredients,
pigment and acrylic resin. The acrylic is the binder that
holds the pigment together in a strong film. Clear mediums
are essentially paints without colours. Acrylic resin is
methylmethylacrylate, the same material that is in acrylic
sheeting, known as plexiglass or perspex. Unlike most other
plastic resins, acrylic has outstanding lightfastness and
weatherfastness. Most other plastics break down in ultraviolet
light exposure, and are subject to yellowing and brittleness.
Acrylic’s resistance to ultraviolet light and outstanding
optical clarity make it a top quality artist’s material.
It is one of the clearest substances available.
For these reasons clear acrylic mediums are suitable as
a "varnish" type coating for finished work. Because
different pigments have different sheens, some areas of
a painting may appear shinier than other areas. Artists
sometimes prefer to unify the sheen of a finished painting
by applying a layer of clear medium to its surface. Using
fluid medium as a clear coat will make the colours appear
more saturated because its sheen is glossy. Using matte
medium as a clear coat will diminish glare. It is only the
sheen of the last layer applied to a surface that will determine
its final sheen.
Since they don’t yellow or get brittle, these mediums
are also suitable as a final protective layer on top of
papier-mâché and mixed media work. They are
especially useful in collage and decoupage as they perform
both as an archival quality adhesive and as a clear coat.
While gesso is more usual in preparing canvas for painting,
clear mediums can also be used. In order to create a complete
seal the first layer of medium can be diluted with water
so that it can soak in and penetrate the fibers of the fabric.
Subsequent layers should be used full strength.
Oil painters usually have several types of oil on hand as
well as turpentine for diluting. Acrylic painters will get
the most out of their colours, and broaden their repertoire
of techniques when they have different types of clear acrylic
medium available to modify their paints, as well as water
as their dilutant.
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