Gamblin Artist's Oil Paint Review | Paint List

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ก.ค. 2024
  • Will Gamblin artist oils be the best oil paints for you? Today we’re looking at the Gamblin Artist oil paints line (not the Gamblin 1980 Oils), meaning they are part of Gamblin’s professional line of artist oil colors.
    Not all Gamblin colors have the same thick consistency. Often painters will modify their oil paints, however we’re looking at the qualities of the paint before it gets changed on the palette- right out of the tube. So we won’t be taking a look at mediums or even Gamsol- just Gamblin oil paint!
    To find out more you can check out paintlist.com. On Paint List, you can search for your favorite paints and discover new ones. 🎨
    Read the in-depth article on Paint List:
    www.paintlist.com/review/17
    Discover the line of Gamblin Artist Oil colors on Paint List:
    paintlist.com/search/oil/gamb...
    Links Mentioned in this Video:
    Paint List Videos of individual Gamblin Paint colors:
    • Mars Black - Gamblin A...
    Paint List video on Gamblin White Paints:
    • Gamblin White Oil Pain...
    --
    Key Moments
    00:00 Intro
    00:43 Gamblin Oil Paint Review
    02:08 Gamblin Impasto Textures
    03:02 Gamblin Radiant Series
    03:54 Gamblin Chromatic Black vs Mars Black
    04:37 Gamblin Cadmiums
    05:09 Gamblin Phthalos
    05:42 Gamblin Tinting Strength
    06:49 Gamblin Convenience Greens
    07:43 Gamblin Radiant White, Flake White Replacement, Titanium White
    08:26 Gamblin Formulation Changes- Alizarin Crimson, Indanthrone Blue
    09:53 Homage to Gamblin Torrit Grey
    10:29 Thanks for Watching
    --
    Links to Gamblin resources:
    Gamblin Radiant Colors:
    gamblincolors.com/radiantcolors/
    Gamblin Reclaimed Earths:
    gamblincolors.com/reclaimed-e...
    Gamblin Torrit Grey:
    gamblincolors.com/torrit-grey/
    --
    Jackson’s Blog compared changes in Gamblin’s Alizarin Crimson and Gamblin Indanthrone Blue Paints. www.jacksonsart.com/blog/2024...
    For more reviews of artist’s paints visit www.paintlist.com. You can search for paints by brand, by pigment, or by paint name.
    Some quick caveats: The colors on the screen differs from the color of the paint. Everyone’s screen differs a bit and some colors are out of gamut. Many important fine art materials are toxic, so please do your research and take the proper precautions. This is just our opinion on the paint, and is offered for education, entertainment, and a spirit of sharing our love of paint (in legalese this means we make no warranties or guarantees and your mileage may vary). Let us know your experiences- we want to hear them.
    Have you used this paint? Let us know in the comments!
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ความคิดเห็น • 23

  • @thepaintlist
    @thepaintlist  หลายเดือนก่อน

    Watch all our Gamblin videos here: th-cam.com/video/SfznKjr5_Pc/w-d-xo.html

  • @andrewlm5677
    @andrewlm5677 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Awsome video. Thank you for doing this

  • @KrstnaSchroeder
    @KrstnaSchroeder 25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    i have been using gamblin oil paints for about 3 maybe 4 years now....i love it so much i have many posts here saying i will take it over old holland anyday!!!

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  25 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Yeah they have so many similarities and differences. Thanks for the comment!

  • @comunidadbitcoin2050
    @comunidadbitcoin2050 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    My new favorite channel❤

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thank you! We're so glad you found the channel! 🎨

  • @VeronicaColvin
    @VeronicaColvin หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Brilliant! Looking forward to seeing more! Subscribed :-). Gamblin’s Yellow Ochre is my favourite Ochre - it has a beautiful golden slant to it - unlike other ochres that can look a bit muddy / toned down. As a portrait painter, would be good to see a Yellow Ochre comparison, as well as Transparent Red Oxide - another staple on the portrait painter’s palette.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks so much for the sub, and also it is *great* to hear your thoughts. Yes, you're absolutely right that it is one of the more chromatic yellow ochres. It is one of those colors that varies so much in hue brand to brand. We will definitely do a yellow ochre comparison, and a transparent red oxide comparison is a wonderful idea!

  • @flickster1980
    @flickster1980 24 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hi Melissa, congrats on starting this channel and the paint list. Looks like many others you also use wetcanvas a fair bit, great resource but not what it was before golden peak purchased it. Would be great if you can add Langridge to your list of premium artist paints to review along with maybe Blue Ridge oil paints. Keep up the great work. My favorite brand is Rublev, but I also love Langridge and Williamsburg. How did you find Mussini? - I like their transparent colours but found their consistency a bit too fluid for me in general. I like a firmer paint from the tube, I can always add medium.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  24 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Greetings and welcome! Yes, I love Rublev paints as well-- especially some of the earths. It is also fun to make one's own paints from their dry pigments. Williamsburg is one of my favorites, and a go-to choice for my palette- their quality is high across every color I've tried. Their commitment to research is impressive! Every Mussini color I've used has been beautiful, and I would use them more except that I personally avoid the inclusion of resin. They do have a few colors that are really hard to find anywhere else (PR242 - www.paintlist.com/paint/oil/2631- and their old formulation for ural yellow was so cool:www.paintlist.com/paint/oil/2630-- it had a rare pigment but has now sadly been replaced by a mixture). In general I go light on the medium but have come to really appreciate Oleogel. Perhaps someday in the future we will add Blue Ridge and/or Langridge, I have heard great things about Langridge oils. Thanks for the comment!

  • @msd5808
    @msd5808 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thanks for this review and your website (I am browsing now). Would like to see a review of Lukas 1862 (oil) and Blue Ridge in the future, maybe some other cheaper brands like Utrecht, Daler-Rowney and Maimeri Classico!

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thanks for your comment!

  • @Sadin15
    @Sadin15 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Gamblin's Cadmium paint tubes are also heavier than their non-cadmium paint tubes which I'm always amazed by.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Totally. They don't call it heavy metal for nothing haha
      Gamblin's Cadmium Red is indeed heavier than their Napthol.

  • @petergrech2582
    @petergrech2582 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love Gamblin Artist oil paints

  • @harvindersingh-nx4qb
    @harvindersingh-nx4qb 16 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Hello ma'am, I bought Gamblin raw umber Its grinding is coarse. I Like fine grinding. Can you tell us about this paint.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  16 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Hi, there, we don't have Gamblin's Raw Umber, so it's interesting to hear that it is coarse- we noticed that coarseness on a couple of the Gamblin earth tones. There was a bit of grit. If you want paint that has some stiffness and is also smooth you can try Michael Harding Raw Umber www.paintlist.com/paint/oil/1825, which has an almost waxlike feel. If a looser paint is ok (not so impasto), you can try Winsor and Newton www.paintlist.com/paint/oil/3472, but it is just a little gritty.
      Thanks for the comment!

    • @harvindersingh-nx4qb
      @harvindersingh-nx4qb 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thankyou so much ma'am for answering me.

    • @harvindersingh-nx4qb
      @harvindersingh-nx4qb 15 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Hello ma'am, one more question is that when I apply varnish, small bubbles appear in it. How to deal with them. I use mat and gloss varnish of fifty fifty Winsor and Newton.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  14 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@harvindersingh-nx4qb Hello, and thanks for your question. I am not an expert in varnishes, however, I know a place you can try to find the answer. There is a forum called MITRA (short for Materials Information and Technical Resources for Artists), which is run by the University of Delaware. With a free account you can ask a question, and there is a good chance it will be answered. Here is the link: www.artcons.udel.edu/mitra/forums. Another place you can try is asking on the Painting Best Practices Facebook associated with George O'Hanlon and Rublev Paints. If you join the group, that page can also be searched to see if other people have had a similar question. Best wishes in finding out what is going on with the varnish!

    • @harvindersingh-nx4qb
      @harvindersingh-nx4qb 13 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Ma'am, Thankyou so much for your guidance...

  • @gary313
    @gary313 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Are these videos paid for by Gamblin? They don't appear independent.

    • @thepaintlist
      @thepaintlist  หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Hello, Gary! Thanks for the comment. Lol, no, these are not paid for by anyone and we are independent. Personally Gamblin is not my favorite brand, but I have used a lot of their paint and know a lot of painters who do. We took a vote on Instagram and a lot of our international followers wanted to hear about Gamblin. For me, the way the Phthalo Green behaved when using a lot of it (at 1:35 in the video) actually changed the way I felt about it after that time. Texture is such a personal preference, so we try to show that gel quality so you can see for yourself. Personally, I can't "un-see" that gel-like quality when I use it. I gesture to something at the part where we talk about mediums which we'll go into in another video, but a lot of contemporary oil paints seem to assume you're going to flood the paint with mediums, and I don't think that's the best practice from an archival standpoint, though I am not a conservationist. I personally prefer a different working method that involves a less-thick paint and basically I don't use mediums or solvents anymore. However the impasto quality out of the tube is not specific to Gamblin- we also see a different variety of stiff paint in Old Holland and Grumbacher. These often need dilution to be workable in realistic painting. As far as pros and cons, if you want a thin paint, don't use Gamblin! :D I would have liked to say more but I don't know what is in the paint for sure as far as its secret ingredients (each brand is this way). As a painter it strikes me that there are a lot of additives here (aluminum stearate comes to mind) but I don't *know*, and so can only conjecture. Also I mentioned the tinting strength is decent but not fantastic in several expensive colors (see the slides with cadmiums)- again we want to show it so that you can see and decide for yourself. Also you can rest assured we bought all the Gamblin paint we tested ourselves and so we actually made the video at great personal expense. Thanks again for the comment!