dazzjazz
Hi
I would appreciate any tips or links to help me get started using oils for weathering please.
Darren
Hi, Darren,
You've covered one of the important prerequisites already-get good paints. I use Schminke-Mussini oils, myself, and Windsor & Newton are very good, too, if you want to add to your colors.
For weathering, I use earth colors-various browns, including burnt and raw siena and umber, along with some shades of yellow and even flesh for mixing and adjusting those colors.
I use oils for dry-brushing, for exhaust stains, for example, or to make washes, and oil or gasoline stains.
I use mineral spirits, but as others have noted, if you're sensitive to the smell, turpenoid is a popular alternative. Though it's not completely odor-free.
And a tip that painters using oils use sometimes is to use a piece of cardboard or brown packaging paper as a palette to leach the linseed oil out of the paint. This leaves a more concentrated pigment. I do that sometimes.
Also, a little bit of the paint will go a long way. It doesn't take a lot to do what we want to do. Those tubes you've bought may last you the rest of your life.
Off the top of my head, that's what I have. Hope it helps!
Best regards,
Brad