I have followed you for years and I am in awe with your work. The wealth of information and the great teacher you are. Thank you so very much. You are awesome
I am so glad that you have included oil pastels in your pastel tutorials this month! I haven’t used them in a while and these will inspire me to try again!
Thank you so much for doing an oil pastel. I can’t wait to try this. I’m going to use it with my son who I homeschool. I really like the real time version better than the time lapse.
Sneaky color theory lesson there! "Color friends" is a much more accessible term than "adjacent colors", and it communicates exactly what is meant- nice! Regarding oil pastel fixatives, we see a few great recommendations in comments. A lot of artists will only use fixative with powdery media to keep dust off the underside of frame glass, but if you'll be handling artwork, it's a smart move. Another great video, and thanks again for mentioning us- does that mean we're "color friends"? ;-)
Thanks so much Lindsay, as others have replied. I too like the real time for learning. What pretty colors in this. I wanted to watch before trying. can't thank you enough, look forward to the next one.
Oh Lindsay! I love this! I had a good clear out of what I have bought over the years! Some things hamper your creativity so remove them! When this tutorial came up! I was gutted! I thought when I cleared things that they went to the charity shop this product was one of them! BUT I came across a bag of mediums! that I am glad I didn't get rid of! Out of that (on top of the wardrobe bag) I still have a set of 24 oil pastels! They are by Inscribe! So I now have a medium which I thought I had de-stashed!. This now gives me licence to play as I thought they were long gone! I will use them to do this tutorial! and not be afraid to waste the medium as I didn't realise I still had it hidden in my stash! I am happy with my find! and will give this a go!
Thanks for this pastel tutorial. My daughter and I will probably try this this upcoming weekend. Byw I am a person who loves the longer in depth tutorials there is always something to be learned. Have a wonderful day
Very pretty and accessible. I've not used oil pastels before but have a package of them I bought for the grand kids. Going to give this a try. Totally prefer live and not timelapse. Thanks so much!
I'm so excited by Pastel Month! This live class is exactly what I needed to try the sand paper and my Mungyo soft pastels. I have a few PanPastels, and a set of Blick hard pastels coming, but I bought a bunch of different oil pastels already! Thanks a bunch, Lindsay!!
PS2: 👍 for the real time version. I enjoyed watching you place the marks and blending, so I could follow along without stressing. Thanks a lot. It is a beautiful painting 🎨!
Wonderful Lindsay! This was great to watch in real time. I always become a little bewildered trying to watch Timelapse. Thanks for posting! I’m doing a marathon catch up session on TH-cam - I had no idea how long it’s been! 🫣
Thanks for making Pasteltember a thing! 🙌 And I'm so glad to see so many others who like real-time videos. I like to play them in the background while I work. 😊
Can't believe I missed this, I love oil pastels! It makes me so happy to see them get more of the spotlight on artsy social media, they're such a fun medium.
About a Fixative; SpectraFix, which I use (really like)with colored pencil, is highly recommended for pastels, too. Trick to it is to keep the nozzle cleaned right after. It's sticky stuff until dry. Real-time tutorials are my favorite. Thank you for this!
Thanks Lindsay. The Sennelier oil pastel fixative is worth the money. I've used it. It is especially appreciated by me on cards I've done in oil pastel. They travel realy well and don't rub off on the inside of the envelope. 😁
As someone else has said the Sennelier D’Artigny Fixative is great, really THE BEST, I think and made especially for oil pastels. I would add that at $15 - 19 per can, it is probably a good idea to only use it on work that you intend on selling or showing or giving as a gift. For practice or “for fun” pieces, I would try some of the cheaper sprays or like Lindsay says, put some glassine in between when storing or filing in a sketchbook or something. If using ANY aerosol spray with propellants, be sure to take it outside to spray and if possible, leave the newly sprayed work outside until the fumes have dissipated. You don’t want to be breathing that stuff. It IS toxic. Spectra-Fix is an all natural pump spray product that I think gets pretty good reviews, but I don’t think it’s quite as good for oil pastels as the Sennelier, but it costs about $3 per bottle less.
I loved this. I enjoy the real time videos more than the time lapsed. Someone gave me an art box that has some pastels in it, generics, not name brand. I’m going to give them a try, this looks like something I can do. Thanks, Lindsey.
I love your painting and love real time versions. I can't do them all but real time helps my brain to absorb knowledge. Speedy videos make me feel stressed. I've used the playback gear to slow those down but then the sound goes wonky. Anyhow, thanks so much for whatever you can manage.
Well I didn’t buy oil pastels, I just bought soft pastels, and my paper didn’t have much tooth, but your tutorial was awesome. My first try is a little basic but I had fun! Looking forward to the next one! Thanks Lindsay!
Hi Lindsay! I was so happy to see that you did an Oil Pastel. I was thinking, when you said "pastels" this month, that it was just be the dry chalky kind (which I won't touch). I do have some oil pastels but have only used them one time on a painting. So thanks for doing this! Hope to see more from you! 💕
Hi Gail! 👋 I was also really pleased to hear Lindsey was planning to use oil pastels as well as the chalky ones. I'm planning on trying all the 'soft pastel' tutorials with my oil pastels. I tried one from a different channel the other day, and it worked quite well. The end result looked very similar, but I had to remember to use all the oil pastel knowledge I have already...
Fingertips down, pun intended, I always prefer live tutorials. It is so much easier for me to navigate watching versus the sped up versions of a video. I think sped up versions actually add more time to me trying to watch in comparison to live. Thid does include stopping and starting multiple times. Hopefully this makes sense to someone.
I really like these real-time tutorial. 😊 I don't have any of those colours in my Sennelier set so I'm going to have to get creative in more ways than one! 😁
Thank you for the name of those finger thingies! Not so much the oil, but chalk pastels freak me out with the feel of them…even watching you blend them makes me feel icky 😂❤
I am going to try a mountain twice once with oil and once chalky mungiyo as a which do I get on with best. Thanks for giving me an idea and encouragement. Love all you do but this live time is better as it gives me a good idea how long you took.
Hi Lindsay. You are inspiring me try oil pastels again. I have a 36 set of student grade Faber Castell. My question is do you not find a sanded paper hard on your fingertips when you blend? I'm looking forward to more of your lessons.
I really enjoyed watching this. Tried using some Gelato's. Was ok but want to get a set of the oil pastels. Definitely am a fan of the real time tutorial's! Thanks for doing this! 😊👍
I've been using the Grumbacher spray fixative for oil and acrylic for years with no issues. A can usually lasts me a pretty long time. (I use Krylon for pencil, soft pastel, and charcoal.) But when I do pastels I typically just cover it with glassine and slip it into a portfolio.
Hullo Lindsay! Lovely painting! You are truly inspirational and so accomplished. I have enjoyed watching your videos and these real time are the most educational, I believe that editing is more necessary for videos that span longer paintings. I work quite slowly and so I am going to need to pause even this video! I know TH-cam does not like videos longer than 40 minutes, I think an exception for streaming might be there but I seldom get recommended videos or streams longer than 30 minutes. I have even had to look up artists I am subscribed to for some of their longer videos! I believe that TH-cam is just WRONG to do this if I am subscribed I want every video they create! I gave my oil sticks away when I decided to focus on soft pastels, I believe that this picture is one that can be created by using either soft or oil pastels. Perhaps during this month of the Pastel you can do a painting twice switching between soft and oils? You could in fact just redo this picture with soft sticks, companion pieces. Why not? Lovely painting and I am looking forward to more September Pastel Extravaganza!
Oh Lindsay, gorgeous! You inspired me to try my Aurora borealis photo on my sand paper!! Can I put down my chalk pastels first, then these soft oil pastels??
Jumping on this question because I've tried (both ways...) If you want to use both together, use the one you want for the base layer then use a workable fixative. The only way that I've found using both types of pastel, one on top of the other, in the same picture without workable fixative was with a light layer of pan pastel under the oil pastel. And (like Lindsey said) the oil pastels still picked up some of the chalkiness - but it was a small enough amount that I could just clean it off the pastel. Rather than the smudge-fest-central that I got with the other combinations. 😉
I started following you on these pastel tutorials. So much fun! Quick question... I have heard u said many times that the oil pastels from Korea are good, may I ask, which other brands, besides Mungyo are Korean? I googled it and also looked at the description on several online stores but can't find that info. And in Puerto Rico, the so called art stores, only sell Expressionist, Cray Pas Junior, and Pentel, and some brand I can't remember at Wallmart. But I can't find which other brands are Korean. Please let me know if you can. 😊
It's the mungyo ones I like. Look for "soft oil pastel" in the name. Most made in korea pastels are mungyo. Cray pas are but they have different grades
I am a beginner and have mainly worked in my sketchbook. But the sticky mess bugged me, so I started using my heatgun or hairdryer for about 10 (+-) seconds on my paintings. It kind of melt the oil pastel and seals the painting when it cools down. For me that works great. Quick and easy. Thank you for a great video. I'm already waiting for the next one 😃
I want to be the first person to comment on the use of the term "mud". First of all, as a person of color it does not offend me. I have a hard time creating my skin tone on purpose and have never ended up with it by accident. Second, I have given this ambiguous color a name that I think is fitting. ZOMBIE SKIN TONE
This may be a dumb question, but does blending with your fingertips on the sanded paper irritate your fingertips? Love the video. Hoping I can make time to try this in the next few days.
I’m excited to try this. I’ve got the Paul Rubens set. I’ve only used them a few times but they seem nice. I’m on a super budget right now and want to use supplies I already have. Instead of the Canson Sand Grain paper, would you recommend cold pressed watercolor paper for the tooth?
Request Lol remember when we were kids those reusable cling vinyl paper dolls? Can you make a video on how to make those so I can make some for my grandkids? I would love to see that ware we can make our to our families and friends pets etc... Thank you so much Love your video and channel..
PS: can you recommend any medium to blend oil pastels? I don't love using my finger but would gladly use a sponge or similar with a medium. Linseed oil, poppy oil? Mineral spirits perhaps? As you see, pretty clueless here?
Linseed oil will brighten the colours - and using it with the oil pastel will mean they dry over time. I don't tend to use any solvent, but if I did it would likely be linseed oil. A lot of other artists seem to use odourless mineral spirits as their go-to, so it is definitely down to personal preference. Any solvent you can use for oil painting or for blending coloured pencil will also work for oil pastel. The oil pastel takes on the drying properties of the solvent, which can be quite handy. Also, if you choose to use a food/seed/nut oil, you need to be aware and think ahead about what you want to use the painting for and how you will preserve it. If you want to go down this route, it might be worth having a chat with a local art shop. Useful note: Like oil pastel, white mineral oil (baby oil) won't dry, and is quite useful for removing residue oil pastel after you scrape it off if you need to remove it for some reason. As Lindsey said, any solvent will thin the oil pastel a bit (or a lot, obviously, depending on how much you use. 😉). So the opacity of the oil pastel will go down (which can be a problem with some of the cheaper options).
Interesting, and I like the longer vids but when I see over 30 min, not so much. Excited that I got the Caran d'ache for "soft", and ordered the Craypas Expressionist (coming tomorrow) which are very inexpensive. Would love to see different solvents and their effect-so ordered Lavender spike oil (in a really small set)$$$$. Found some turps around the garage and stuff that probably has long beards...getting ready is almost as much fun as doing the work 😁😁😁 . Experimenting!! How would these oil pastels work on canvas? Too much flex? Thank you for showing this medium Lindsay 💜
I'm still confused. I can't figure out if you are talking about a paper that's the colour of sand, or if it's an actual sanded paper like a sanded pastel paper, or something else.
I have used them with colored pencils. Here are some tutorials: th-cam.com/video/NUVJNz3vhSM/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/sF0SunoH88g/w-d-xo.html It's not a true sanded paper. More of a gritty, pebbly texture. Not as rough as sandpaper.
Here's a stupid question, I'm not an artist at all, can't draw a stick man, just like watching artists paint etc, my question, what's the difference between oil pastels and wax crayons?
Wax crayons are harder and more brittle than oil pastels. They are cheaper but tend to be less vibrant. Like oil pastels they are quick and easy to use
i always enjoy the real time tutorials more than the sped up ones... it sets the right expectations for those that really want to learn. :)
I have followed you for years and I am in awe with your work. The wealth of information and the great teacher you are. Thank you so very much. You are awesome
Thanks so much, I really appreciate that!
I prefer the real time tutorials. Glad you started with oil pastels. My soft pastels haven’t arrived yet. Maybe you’ll start a trend with Pastember!
Yes, on the real time videos. I appreciate tutorials using oil pastels. I have a set and haven’t used them yet. Thanks!
I am so glad that you have included oil pastels in your pastel tutorials this month! I haven’t used them in a while and these will inspire me to try again!
And Pastel-ember(September) has begun. Start the trend.
I am using pastelseptember. 🙂
The real time tutorial is fantastic! So excited to get my oil pastels out and give this a try it's been awhile Love it! Thanks Lindsay
Thank you so much for doing an oil pastel. I can’t wait to try this. I’m going to use it with my son who I homeschool. I really like the real time version better than the time lapse.
Sneaky color theory lesson there! "Color friends" is a much more accessible term than "adjacent colors", and it communicates exactly what is meant- nice! Regarding oil pastel fixatives, we see a few great recommendations in comments. A lot of artists will only use fixative with powdery media to keep dust off the underside of frame glass, but if you'll be handling artwork, it's a smart move. Another great video, and thanks again for mentioning us- does that mean we're "color friends"? ;-)
We sure are!
Thanks so much Lindsay, as others have replied. I too like the real time for learning. What pretty colors in this. I wanted to watch before trying. can't thank you enough, look forward to the next one.
Oh Lindsay! I love this! I had a good clear out of what I have bought over the years! Some things hamper your creativity so remove them! When this tutorial came up! I was gutted! I thought when I cleared things that they went to the charity shop this product was one of them! BUT I came across a bag of mediums! that I am glad I didn't get rid of! Out of that (on top of the wardrobe bag) I still have a set of 24 oil pastels! They are by Inscribe! So I now have a medium which I thought I had de-stashed!. This now gives me licence to play as I thought they were long gone! I will use them to do this tutorial! and not be afraid to waste the medium as I didn't realise I still had it hidden in my stash! I am happy with my find! and will give this a go!
It's meant to be!
Thanks for this pastel tutorial. My daughter and I will probably try this this upcoming weekend. Byw I am a person who loves the longer in depth tutorials there is always something to be learned. Have a wonderful day
Very pretty and accessible. I've not used oil pastels before but have a package of them I bought for the grand kids. Going to give this a try. Totally prefer live and not timelapse. Thanks so much!
Love it! Real time for sure!! And the Sennelier fixative is great!!
Especially when working with a new medium, I appreciate the real time tutorials. Thx, Lindsay!
I'm so excited by Pastel Month! This live class is exactly what I needed to try the sand paper and my Mungyo soft pastels. I have a few PanPastels, and a set of Blick hard pastels coming, but I bought a bunch of different oil pastels already! Thanks a bunch, Lindsay!!
I can’t wait to try this! I learn more from your longer tutorials Lindsay.
Great tutorial, Lindsay! Thanks for making Pastel Month a thing - I’m looking forward to getting more comfortable with my pastels.
Oil pastels, yay!!! Live that this can be done with a small set. Thanks Lindsay!
PS2: 👍 for the real time version. I enjoyed watching you place the marks and blending, so I could follow along without stressing. Thanks a lot. It is a beautiful painting 🎨!
Wonderful Lindsay! This was great to watch in real time. I always become a little bewildered trying to watch Timelapse. Thanks for posting! I’m doing a marathon catch up session on TH-cam - I had no idea how long it’s been! 🫣
Thanks for making Pasteltember a thing! 🙌
And I'm so glad to see so many others who like real-time videos. I like to play them in the background while I work. 😊
Thank you!
Just what I needed. We are about to try oil pastels in my senior art class for the 1st time! Thank you so much and I love the real time videos best.
Thanks! This was my first time using oil Pastels, great fun :)
Can't believe I missed this, I love oil pastels! It makes me so happy to see them get more of the spotlight on artsy social media, they're such a fun medium.
I love the real time tutorials!! Thank you!
For blending, I cut white erasers into different shapes. They are a great alternative to using fingers, and you can use thin points for details.
Great idea!
Thanks for the tip!
About a Fixative; SpectraFix, which I use (really like)with colored pencil, is highly recommended for pastels, too. Trick to it is to keep the nozzle cleaned right after. It's sticky stuff until dry.
Real-time tutorials are my favorite. Thank you for this!
Thanks Lindsay. The Sennelier oil pastel fixative is worth the money. I've used it. It is especially appreciated by me on cards I've done in oil pastel. They travel realy well and don't rub off on the inside of the envelope. 😁
Thanks!
As someone else has said the Sennelier D’Artigny Fixative is great, really THE BEST, I think and made especially for oil pastels. I would add that at $15 - 19 per can, it is probably a good idea to only use it on work that you intend on selling or showing or giving as a gift. For practice or “for fun” pieces, I would try some of the cheaper sprays or like Lindsay says, put some glassine in between when storing or filing in a sketchbook or something. If using ANY aerosol spray with propellants, be sure to take it outside to spray and if possible, leave the newly sprayed work outside until the fumes have dissipated. You don’t want to be breathing that stuff. It IS toxic. Spectra-Fix is an all natural pump spray product that I think gets pretty good reviews, but I don’t think it’s quite as good for oil pastels as the Sennelier, but it costs about $3 per bottle less.
LOVE this!!!! Time to take out my oil pastels. I’m so excited!
Thanks Lindsay great tutorial sweet painting and the old socks tip just solved a "what shall I do with them" problem. 😀
I prefer the full real time videos but enjoy all you post. Thanks for a great video Lindsay and will remember to use “colour friends.”
I finally put aside time and did this one! I loved using the oil pastels but I used a different Paul Rubens set. Thank you for this video 😊
I loved this. I enjoy the real time videos more than the time lapsed. Someone gave me an art box that has some pastels in it, generics, not name brand. I’m going to give them a try, this looks like something I can do. Thanks, Lindsey.
I love your painting and love real time versions. I can't do them all but real time helps my brain to absorb knowledge. Speedy videos make me feel stressed. I've used the playback gear to slow those down but then the sound goes wonky. Anyhow, thanks so much for whatever you can manage.
Thank you so much. I needed to know more about oil pastels.
I love this! It reminds me of Mt St Helens from the west!
Yes I like the real time videos best. Tfs
I love the real time. Thank so much for this. So much fun!
The colors are so pretty. The mountain is majestic.
Thank you Lindsay. This looks very beginner friendly!
Very tranquil peice. Nice indeed.
Yes, love the real time tutorials!
Well I didn’t buy oil pastels, I just bought soft pastels, and my paper didn’t have much tooth, but your tutorial was awesome. My first try is a little basic but I had fun! Looking forward to the next one! Thanks Lindsay!
Love the real-time tutorial!!!!
Thank you, Lindsay. It's a really helpful tutorial and an easy way to begin!
Real-time 💗
Hi Lindsay! I was so happy to see that you did an Oil Pastel. I was thinking, when you said "pastels" this month, that it was just be the dry chalky kind (which I won't touch). I do have some oil pastels but have only used them one time on a painting. So thanks for doing this! Hope to see more from you! 💕
Hi Gail! 👋
I was also really pleased to hear Lindsey was planning to use oil pastels as well as the chalky ones.
I'm planning on trying all the 'soft pastel' tutorials with my oil pastels. I tried one from a different channel the other day, and it worked quite well. The end result looked very similar, but I had to remember to use all the oil pastel knowledge I have already...
Very pretty! I like all of your videos! Always learn something!
Thanks!
Gorgeous 😊Excellent explanations 🕊🎨🖼
This is beautiful and I will sure give it a try! Thanks for sharing
Fingertips down, pun intended, I always prefer live tutorials. It is so much easier for me to navigate watching versus the sped up versions of a video. I think sped up versions actually add more time to me trying to watch in comparison to live. Thid does include stopping and starting multiple times. Hopefully this makes sense to someone.
This is so beautiful! I love the colors you chose! Thank you!
Thank you for the tutorial! I prefer the real time ones 😊
Love this, whether time lapse or real doesn’t matter to me. Great work, thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it
I really like these real-time tutorial. 😊
I don't have any of those colours in my Sennelier set so I'm going to have to get creative in more ways than one! 😁
Thank you for the name of those finger thingies! Not so much the oil, but chalk pastels freak me out with the feel of them…even watching you blend them makes me feel icky 😂❤
I like real time tutorials.
Great start to pastel month!
Thanks for sharing your art. Love it !!
Love it ❤ so nice and calming, super relaxing. I like how u reply or love people's comments. U are very kind ❤❤ too underrated 😊😊
😊 thank you
I am going to try a mountain twice once with oil and once chalky mungiyo as a which do I get on with best. Thanks for giving me an idea and encouragement. Love all you do but this live time is better as it gives me a good idea how long you took.
Lovely work! I am so glad you did a tutorial of this one. I hope to try it this evening.
Love the real time … thanks 😊
Hi Lindsay. You are inspiring me try oil pastels again. I have a 36 set of student grade Faber Castell. My question is do you not find a sanded paper hard on your fingertips when you blend? I'm looking forward to more of your lessons.
This is not a true sanded paper so it is not hard at all.
I vote for Real Time!
I really enjoyed watching this. Tried using some Gelato's. Was ok but want to get a set of the oil pastels. Definitely am a fan of the real time tutorial's! Thanks for doing this! 😊👍
I've been using the Grumbacher spray fixative for oil and acrylic for years with no issues. A can usually lasts me a pretty long time. (I use Krylon for pencil, soft pastel, and charcoal.) But when I do pastels I typically just cover it with glassine and slip it into a portfolio.
Ooo. And a new paper for Pastels?
I love the Canson xl sand grain!
Love the real time!
I have just been using the Krylon workable fixative (2 coats) and it has been working really well for me.
Hullo Lindsay! Lovely painting! You are truly inspirational and so accomplished. I have enjoyed watching your videos and these real time are the most educational, I believe that editing is more necessary for videos that span longer paintings. I work quite slowly and so I am going to need to pause even this video! I know TH-cam does not like videos longer than 40 minutes, I think an exception for streaming might be there but I seldom get recommended videos or streams longer than 30 minutes. I have even had to look up artists I am subscribed to for some of their longer videos! I believe that TH-cam is just WRONG to do this if I am subscribed I want every video they create! I gave my oil sticks away when I decided to focus on soft pastels, I believe that this picture is one that can be created by using either soft or oil pastels. Perhaps during this month of the Pastel you can do a painting twice switching between soft and oils? You could in fact just redo this picture with soft sticks, companion pieces. Why not? Lovely painting and I am looking forward to more September Pastel Extravaganza!
Tomorrow's video is a soft pastel sunrise over a swamp. The colors are similar so you have options without being redundant:)
Oh Lindsay, gorgeous! You inspired me to try my Aurora borealis photo on my sand paper!! Can I put down my chalk pastels first, then these soft oil pastels??
I think they will gum up
Jumping on this question because I've tried (both ways...)
If you want to use both together, use the one you want for the base layer then use a workable fixative.
The only way that I've found using both types of pastel, one on top of the other, in the same picture without workable fixative was with a light layer of pan pastel under the oil pastel.
And (like Lindsey said) the oil pastels still picked up some of the chalkiness - but it was a small enough amount that I could just clean it off the pastel.
Rather than the smudge-fest-central that I got with the other combinations. 😉
Beautiful painting ! Thank you .
I started following you on these pastel tutorials. So much fun! Quick question... I have heard u said many times that the oil pastels from Korea are good, may I ask, which other brands, besides Mungyo are Korean? I googled it and also looked at the description on several online stores but can't find that info. And in Puerto Rico, the so called art stores, only sell Expressionist, Cray Pas Junior, and Pentel, and some brand I can't remember at Wallmart. But I can't find which other brands are Korean. Please let me know if you can. 😊
It's the mungyo ones I like. Look for "soft oil pastel" in the name. Most made in korea pastels are mungyo. Cray pas are but they have different grades
Thank you so much for this. The piece came out great 🤗👏
I am a beginner and have mainly worked in my sketchbook. But the sticky mess bugged me, so I started using my heatgun or hairdryer for about 10 (+-) seconds on my paintings. It kind of melt the oil pastel and seals the painting when it cools down. For me that works great. Quick and easy. Thank you for a great video. I'm already waiting for the next one 😃
Thanks for the tip!
Can’t wait to try it! Thanks Lindsay!
BEautiful love this I will for sure try this. Thank you so much
I like the real time tutorials. I bet it’ll take me more than 15 minutes though, we’ll see
I want to be the first person to comment on the use of the term "mud". First of all, as a person of color it does not offend me. I have a hard time creating my skin tone on purpose and have never ended up with it by accident. Second, I have given this ambiguous color a name that I think is fitting. ZOMBIE SKIN TONE
Perfect name!
Love it! ❤
That just seems like such a random unrelated to the tutorial comment.
Can't wait to try this
This may be a dumb question, but does blending with your fingertips on the sanded paper irritate your fingertips? Love the video. Hoping I can make time to try this in the next few days.
Not in this paper. It's not real sand. Some can be rough tho.
I’m excited to try this. I’ve got the Paul Rubens set. I’ve only used them a few times but they seem nice. I’m on a super budget right now and want to use supplies I already have. Instead of the Canson Sand Grain paper, would you recommend cold pressed watercolor paper for the tooth?
That will work fine:)
Excellent! Learned a lot. Thank you
That painting turned out so pretty! I wish I liked working with pastels, but I just don't LOL! Whatcha gonna do?
So beautiful ❤️
Request Lol remember when we were kids those reusable cling vinyl paper dolls? Can you make a video on how to make those so I can make some for my grandkids? I would love to see that ware we can make our to our families and friends pets etc... Thank you so much Love your video and channel..
PS: can you recommend any medium to blend oil pastels? I don't love using my finger but would gladly use a sponge or similar with a medium. Linseed oil, poppy oil? Mineral spirits perhaps? As you see, pretty clueless here?
If you don't want to use any medium, tortillions and blending stumps work very well with soft oil pastels. :)
You can use a solvent or oil but it will make it more transparent. Silicone tipped nail tools work great for blending. amzn.to/3TPfZBh
@@thefrugalcrafter Thanks. Will try that. Sounds good
@@turtleeye4 That is a great tip. I have some lying around. Will try!
Linseed oil will brighten the colours - and using it with the oil pastel will mean they dry over time. I don't tend to use any solvent, but if I did it would likely be linseed oil.
A lot of other artists seem to use odourless mineral spirits as their go-to, so it is definitely down to personal preference.
Any solvent you can use for oil painting or for blending coloured pencil will also work for oil pastel. The oil pastel takes on the drying properties of the solvent, which can be quite handy.
Also, if you choose to use a food/seed/nut oil, you need to be aware and think ahead about what you want to use the painting for and how you will preserve it.
If you want to go down this route, it might be worth having a chat with a local art shop.
Useful note:
Like oil pastel, white mineral oil (baby oil) won't dry, and is quite useful for removing residue oil pastel after you scrape it off if you need to remove it for some reason.
As Lindsey said, any solvent will thin the oil pastel a bit (or a lot, obviously, depending on how much you use. 😉). So the opacity of the oil pastel will go down (which can be a problem with some of the cheaper options).
Interesting, and I like the longer vids but when I see over 30 min, not so much.
Excited that I got the Caran d'ache for "soft", and ordered the Craypas Expressionist (coming tomorrow) which are very inexpensive. Would love to see different solvents and their effect-so ordered Lavender spike oil (in a really small set)$$$$. Found some turps around the garage and stuff that probably has long beards...getting ready is almost as much fun as doing the work 😁😁😁 . Experimenting!!
How would these oil pastels work on canvas? Too much flex?
Thank you for showing this medium Lindsay 💜
Oil pastels never really set so they are better on paper and framed under glass
Do I use the smooth side or the rough side of the paper?
Rough
When you say sand canson, do you mean the colour or is it a sanded paper?
It's how the paper comes
I'm still confused. I can't figure out if you are talking about a paper that's the colour of sand, or if it's an actual sanded paper like a sanded pastel paper, or something else.
its the texture@@crystalgillis9296
Just wondering if the sand grain paper similar to sanded paper? Its so much more affordable. Have you tried it with colored pencils?
Even super fine sand paper would probably use up pencil quickly. Could try it!
I have used them with colored pencils. Here are some tutorials:
th-cam.com/video/NUVJNz3vhSM/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/sF0SunoH88g/w-d-xo.html
It's not a true sanded paper. More of a gritty, pebbly texture. Not as rough as sandpaper.
which oil pastel have you used?
It's linked in the description:)
What paper are you using?
Canson xl sand grain dry mixed media paper
Thank u!
pastelseptember 😁
Here's a stupid question, I'm not an artist at all, can't draw a stick man, just like watching artists paint etc, my question, what's the difference between oil pastels and wax crayons?
Wax crayons are harder and more brittle than oil pastels. They are cheaper but tend to be less vibrant. Like oil pastels they are quick and easy to use
@@paintblush6884 thank you for your response.
Real time, Yes/Timelapse, No. I like to relax when watching tutorials, not get hyper lol. To each his own, tho.
😍
Mungyo is pronounced Moon-yo
Can you please talk slower? PLEASE?!!
You van click the gear and adjust the playback speed.
There is captions too
And u can change the setting