Before you even start with the pouring technique, you should first familiarise yourself with the necessary materials so that you don't waste too much money unnecessarily later.
For this reason, I would like to use this article to give you a brief introduction to the world of acrylic colours and let you get to know this material better.
What are acrylic paints?
Acrylic paints are fast-drying water-based paints made of pigments suspended in acrylic polymer emulsion (for this reason they are also called dispersion colours).
The main components of acrylic paint are:
Granular pigments, that give the colour to the paint;
a binder, which is plastic based and is responsible for keeping the pigments together after the drying process through a thin plastic film;
a solvent (water) that combined with the binder forms a polymer emulsion responsible for the creation of the thin film after water evaporation/absorption.
The most important advantages offered by acrylic paint are:
They are versatile and can be used in different mix-media techniques;
They have a very good colouring-quality,
They dry quickly,
They are water-resistant when dry
The possibility to change some of these properties by adding various mediums (f.e. it is possible retard the drying time, to thicken or thin the paint)
Usable on different material such as paper, glass, canvas, plastic, wood, etc.
Less toxicity than oil paints
Cheaper than oil-paints.
How were acrylic paints discovered? A short history
The origin of acrylic paint has to be linked to the invention of the acrylic resin by the German Otto Röhm in 1940. At the beginning this resin was used principally for home paint but then the artists Leonard Bocour and Sam Golden (who went on to be a founder of Golden Artist Colors Inc.) managed to develope a solution of spirit-based paint by the brand name “Magna” between 1946 and 1949, that became the basis of modern acrylic paints.
Starting from this followed about 20 years of studies and trials to redefine and improve the paints. During 1960s more and more artists understood the versatility and ease of use for this new paint supply, that had a soft-body and more fluid consistency that the one we know today .
The first artists to use acrylic paint as an art supply were Diego Rivera, Jose Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros (known as Mexican Muralists), some abstract expressionists such as Helen Frankenthaler and Louis Morris, who could achieve similar results to the one obtained with watercolours, Mark Rothko for his mix-media technique with oil paints, charcoal and pigments, or Andy Warhol for his Campbell’s Soup Cans.
More recently acrylic paint has become very popular due to the rediscovery of the acrylic pouring technique.
How many types of acrylic paints exist?
Acrylic paints can be categorised according to their type and consistency.
Categorisation by type
In this case, a distinction is made between normal acrylic colours and effect acrylic colours.
The former are those based on normal pigments such as yellow, red, orange, blue, green, violet, black or white.
The latter are colours that can reproduce a special effect because they are mainly produced with special pigments and include
Luminescent Paint
This kind of paint is able to emitting light without producing heat. Examples of this paints are neon, fluorescent or phosphorescent colours
Iridescent Paint
This kind of paints change their look according to the angle they are observed and the surface they cover. The iridescence can be either rainbow-like or simply giving back a strong shimmer in case of gold, silver, etc. In this group we can find
metallic (or iridescent) colours: Metallic paints are usually made of either metallic pigments or MICA particles coated with iron oxide either alone or combined with titanium dioxide to make them more opaque.
pearlescent or interference colours : Interference paints are paints based of MICA particles coated with only titanium white which is responsible for the reflection of a particular light wavelenght. The interference colour (white, yellow, red, purple, blue, green) depends on the thickness of the coat. A thin coat gives back white, the thickest coat a green. The pearlescent paint could be considered a sub-group of interference paints. In this case the colour will give back (similar to a pearl) a white light interfered by another coloured.
DYNA (dynamic) colours: They are a particular category of paints created by Pebeo made of a normal paint mixed with interference paint.
The best results for iridescent acrylic colours are obtained on dark backgrounds.
Categorisation based on their consistency
In commerce there are many varieties of acrylic paints.
Heavy body acrylic paints,
Very thick consistency and mostly used for impasto or heavier paint applications. Examples of Heavy Body Acrylics are Liquitex Heavy Body Acrylics, Golden Heavy Body Acrylics, Amsterdam Expert Acrylics.
Liquid acrylic paints, soft-body acrylic paints or high-flow acrylic paints
They have a lower viscosity and same degree of pigmentation as the Heavy Body acrylics. They are mostly used for watercolour techniques, airbrush application, or when smooth coverage is desired. Fluid acrylics can be thickened for impasto work or to thinned for glazing applications. Examples of fluid acrylics Amsterdam Acrylics, Lukascryl Studio, Liquitex Soft Body and Golden Fluid acrylics.
How can be acrylic paints washed away from clothes or other surfaces?
Here some useful pieces of advice to wash away acrylic paints from our clothes or other surfaces: https://arteza.com/blogs/articles/remove-acrylic-paint-from-clothes.
I hope I could help you to get to know better our beloved acrylic paints.
Thank you for reading. If you like the post, feel free to leave a like, a comment and don’t forget to follow my blog and share the content on your social media.
Have a colourful and creative day!
Laura
Comments