Michael Hardings' Refined Linseed Oil.
So much has already been written upon Linseed oil I do not aim to repeat but to simply give a broad outline as to the caricature of this remarkable gift from nature.
Indeed a gift! Please consider that before the industrial revolution there were no factories producing nice thick viscous resin that could be incorporated with coloured pigments to produce fine artist paint. However on this particular occasion Mother Nature has been incredibly generous in giving us linseed oil. Not only is linseed oil a health supplement it also makes a wonderful drying base for artist paint. It also dries in a timely manner with a strong film. Consider the old fashioned floor covering linoleum obviously also made from linseed, how tough and how kind nature has been! It dries in several days allowing the artist to revisit areas of the painting to adjust to taste the finished appearance of the work. Linseed oil comes from the seeds of the flax plant Linum usitatssimum, some writers claim mans relationship with the plant goes back some 30,000 years to Eastern Europe. It became common to many cultures down through the centuries mainly for its other major use that of making linen and yes that obviously means canvass for artist also. Indeed a very special gift from nature, the name in Latin usitatissimum means most useful. So we artists owe a great deal to this beautiful small plant.
Today linseed oil or rather flax is grown in many places throughout the world that is both wet and cool. Europe where Michael Hardings linseed oil comes from is ideal.
The Drying Process of Linseed
When we use the term drying it is a rather inaccurate way of describing what is actually happening. Drying is a term we normally use to describe evaporation such as the case with watercolours or anything for that matter; once the liquid water has departed we are left with a solid soluble mass. Linseed oil is different I sometimes feel the term cure would be more appropriate though even then from a chemists point of view this would not be quite correct either. When we describe the process of oil paint becoming solid it is by a process of polymerisation in laymens terms the term drying not surprisingly being used. The polymerisation is the process by which the linseed combines with oxygen in air to form a solid. Other factors such as the chemistry of pigments can affect the speed such as the speeding up of the process with pigments that are metal based such as earth colours containing iron. There also is a more complex relationship involving other natural elements within the oil such as iodine, which also play a large roll.
Speed of drying can be influenced by a number of things, the more light and warmth playing a fundamental part, we all remember from school chemistry that warmth speeds all chemical reaction and again not surprisingly this is the case with linseed. Presence of metallic elements as stated before is a strong influencing factor.
Often oil paint manufacturers include artificial drying agents or siccatives, as they are more professionally known, these can be harmful to the paint structure itself and cause lots of problems from embrittlement to flaking to wrinkling. This is a practice we do not engage in with the exception of two products, our Paint Medium No 2 (PM 2) a glaze medium, and our titanium white No 3. The titanium no 3 was added to the range to appease the frustrated artists of London who paint in cold studios and strangely though there is only a minute amount of siccative probably the same amount as within other brands this is a product I light heartedly say I do not want you to buy it as it affects the longevity! I want your paintings to last for at least 500 years and if constructed accordingly and upon a sound support they should have every possibility to do so.
When the paint film containing linseed takes up this very minor amount of oxygen from the air it means that the actual paint becomes slightly larger and as it expands it causes problems like wrinkling. As an analogy imagine coming home to find your carpets had grown and increased in surface area, not surprisingly the carpet would appear in rolls or wrinkles. It has a similar visual affect with the surface of your paint as it slowly expands. If the body of the paint is either low in oil content for example lead or cadmium based pigments the texture of the paint is such that it will resist the tendency to wrinkle unless unnecessary amounts of linseed have been added.
To get the best clarity from linseed oil paints its always wise the let the painting dry in a good light, ideally in a window with good strong day light even direct sunlight for a few days will do no harm. The reason for this advice is if you allow a painting to dry in a bad light it will render the painting to have a dull yellow cast over it, this yellow affect will clear up once the painting is back in normal lit conditions however it will never be as bright or crisp as painting dry in well lit environments. Of course artist often think to protect the work from the ravages of all from children to pets and dust is wise placing the painting a painting in a dark place but this can be very counterproductive.
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Country of Origin:UK
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Make:Michael Harding
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Size:250ml
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Type:Oil
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Material:Oil
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Brand:Michael Harding
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Product Code:UK
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Weight:0.5kg