That you give away your color wheel for free tells me you truly want to help others not just make a fast buck off us “wannabe” artists. Thank you for your kindness and generosity. May you be blessed throughout your career!
Totally agree. In Addition.....( Would you make a Specific video w mediums and drying times....i.e. I have paintings that Rrrrrr peeling and chipping / flaking from layering that I've spent 10+ years on.
I need some help with going forward at this point. Lost so much confidence painting after seeing those Paintings I have spent that much time on. 🤞🤞🤞 And I thought I had right.
I really like Venetian read. I rarely use it because I have a tendency not to use the reds on my palette, but I have a tube of it and I’ve played with it. Lovely colour, great for flesh tones
Your professional approach and delivery of information is incredible. I paint as a hoppy and I listen to you intently God bless you, I learned so much from you 💋🙏🏻
Brother, this was one of the BEST made color theory/pallete videos out there. Excellent! Along side Andrew Tischler pallette vid. My pallette is the same... Lead + Titanium white, Burnt Umber, Burnt Sienna, Trans Red + Yellow Oxide, Yellow Ocher, (sometimes Gen naples yellow M. Harding) Cad yellow light, Cad red light, cad red deep(sometimes), Quin magenta(always), Cobalt teal, and Ultramarine(sometimes Curelean) Blue, and thalo green....all Blue Ridge Oils, Windsor pro grade, Gamblin artists, or Rublev oils
I'm a graphite artist wanting to go into oil painting so watching you to learn about what I need and how to begin is amazing and I know I will be super ready.
There's another channel that has a completely different approach called "Draw mix Paint". He only uses the primaries RYB plus burnt umber and white. Only 5 colors. The thing is he can pretty much do the same thing this guy does with realism, with the exception of the super bright colors like cobalt teal blue. May be an easier approach, but really do as you wish.
This channel is amazing, I absolutely love the way you present the topics, great narration, nice editing, great camera work, the extreme close up shots of the colors are sensational! Keep up the great work. Cheers!👍🏻🍀😎
Great vid! For my portrait paintings I use a palette of Flake white replacement, transoxide yellow, transoxide red, vermillion, alizarin red permanent, viridian green, raw umber. Sometimes adding, ultra marine, naples yellow. For landscapes etc: the more modern cad hues and kobalt blue/ceruleum blue, titanium white. I never premix, I find it tedious and am not very organised!
I love your channel and your teaching method. This video is SUPER useful! I also got the PDF with the color wheel system for theory and practice. Fantastic! Thank you!
Thank you so much for this and all your videos!!! I have downloaded the pdf . 🙏 Thanks for sharing it for free. You are a blessing!!!!! May you be very very very happy and healthy always .
You are so wonderful to a beginner artist! Thank you for all you do! I plan to buy the poster of your color wheel because it has so much information I need on it!
So glad you nit only mention but use Munsell. Magenta and Cyan were integral to the freshman color and light course. You make the discussion not only rational but sensible. As to my palette. Because pigments naturally vary in transparency, I have an extensive shelf of paints. my palette is very dynamic and many times there might be more than one pan set up. This has evolved over time as I have learned more about the pigments. I am fortunate to live quite close to a well-known artists paint company and they take my phone calls. thank you for being an artist's artist and sharing your knowedge.
Finding success with the Reilly Palette, I also enjoy using a modified Zorn palette. Zorn is a good palette for beginners bc it takes a lot of overthinking out of the equation
great video! I always love to see which pigment are used by others! I have my palette separated in left an right, with white in the middle. on the right hand side: sometimes unbleached titanium dioxide, yellow ochre, sometimes transparent yellow oxide, transparent oxide red, indian red, burnt umber, sometimes ivory black. on the left hand side: cadmium yellow light, sometimes a transparent yellow, cadmium red light, quinacridone magenta (pr122), ultramarine blue, phthalo blue green shade or cobalt teal (both good cyan ;-) ) and last but not least sometimes a green like viridian, phthalogreen or greengold.
Your comments during this video fit in so much with my own, from my earlier painting experience as a technical illustrator; now that I am at a later stage in my career, where I want explore and enjoy the use of colour, what you have taught here, is going to be so useful for myself personally, so I thank you sincerely. I have only recently come across your advice videos, but I will now view many more, as I think our styles are so similar, I believe that they will help my exploration and my consequent enjoyment.
Hi Florent, I watched your oil painting medium video and you did say how you can’t stand the smell of alkyd based mediums, I personally would recommend you try the gamblins solvent free fluid it is and alkyd resin however it’s made from safflower oil and it’s consistency is very similar to liquin fine details by Winsor and Newton.
Lead white is absolutely amazing on a palette. It just offers an amazing amount of flexibility and basically does everything Titanium white doesn't. You're severely limited when it comes to glazing and scumbling without lead white. You can definitely do some incredible things with it.
Titanium white, cad yellow lemon, yellow ochre, burnt umber, burnt sienna, alizarin crimson, cad red light, ultramarine blue, cerulean blue, viridian green & sap green give me most of the colors I need for portraits. I have been experimenting with more transparent paints for glazing with neo megilp. But that cyan is sooo beautiful, it will definitely be one of my next buys!
I've never used flake white, but I did use scarlet vermillion in one small painting. The amount of care I took to only put the vermillion on canvas, brush and waste jar (which then went to hazardous waste depot) meant that it was a higher anxiety project than usual. It's a strong but co-operative pigment - not overwhelming like the phthalos. I will never use it again, but I'm glad I did. Thank you so much for these videos!
Hi. Old Holland sells Cremnitz White, the best white there ever was. I went to my local art supply shop and straight asked them if they can bring me some and surprisingly they said yes. I waited about two weeks and I managed to buy two cans. The price was around 50 euros per can and the cans were not that big, however there is enough quantity for me to be happy for awhile. For reference, I live in the EU, Romania. The lead white is the only white that will not chalk up light pastel colors and bar none the best white for use in glazing. My 2 cents.
Lithopone white PW5 ( I have a tube from Lukas) is the best white for glazing in my opinion. I don't have much experience with it ( I started using it only recently) , but it was a pleasant surprise . I like also the way it mixes with other colours. I'm using lithopone when I want more saturated mixes and for subtle glazing. It's also non toxic and does not have the issues of the zinc oxides. I'll see how it goes..
Another excellent video full of information. I love how the color wheel shows where each tube color belongs. Do you have any chart showing the colors in order of transparencies, and another showing the transparency of the colors. That will be so helpful.
Talking of science, with Winsor and Newton Alkyd 80 range, I mixed every color with every other color, then ditto plus titanium white giving a matrix of about 3,000 colors, then sorted in primary groups and put in album. I only mix the colors for each part of a painting. Then the A4 mixes, at the end of a session seal them in polythene and put them in the freezer. Colours remain fresh, for me, up to a month.
Well... When I was using acrylics I had quite a good selection of color tubes. The convenience of having pre-mixed colors, coupled with the difficulty of mixing acrylics and the quick drying time, somehow force you to have many colors. With oils have dramatically reduced the quantity. I don't use cyan yet, I use manganese blue, and don't use the phtalo green as don't find the need yet but more or less I have the same or similar colors as you do. In any case, thanks a lot for your good suggestions. Oh...forgot - I have Sap Green too which I think is quite useful.
I love watching your videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills! Can i ask, if I do not know how to draw, is it still possible to paint realistic images? Is there a technique for that? Or just quit 😅
Thank you for the video is very helpfull. I use white titanium altemerian blue. .cademion red and yellow . Yellow ochre. Brunet brown . Black. Cobalt blue . And terquize .
Hello Florent, thank you for another amazing video. What brand of paints do you use? I just checked my Windsor & Newton colour chart and none of their numbers match the ones you gave us on here and colour names are not the same either. I thought pigment numbers were standard for all brands? Kind regards
I like the video. It was very informative. Thanks for the free color charts. I'm curious as to your pallette. What is it mad e from? Glass, metal or what.
May I disagree about Lead White. It was the greatest improvement of my palette because of the subtleties it permits, allowing to work with earths as I couldn't before. I'm glad titanium is enough for you, but I wouldn't change it for any other white
I'm very glad that you're aware of the comments. I'm considering to try Cobalt Teal, instead of Cerulean Blue, thought I allready use Viridian as a cold green, and I keep thinking that I'm not able to differentiate Viridian tints, from Cobalt Teal straight from the tube. What are your thoughts about it?
Hello? Can we use pb28 instead of pg50? What difference can be? I have gamblin cobalt teal blue (pb28) now I am thinking should buy a new williamsburg cobalt teal (pg50)
I don't think you could even really import lead white, as it's banned from the EU I think. I can't seem to get it here in the Netherlands either. Also, the 'big' thing about lead white is how it is a white that will pretty much last for decades, contrary to some other 'modern' whites that are known to 'bleed or sweat oil' after like 50+ years or so. One of those modern whites is actually zinc white. It's a truly big problem in mid nineteenth century paintings. The zinc oxide forms zinc 'soaps' by reacting with other elements, which basically destroys a painting in the long-term (wherever a lot of zinc white was used). Anyway, excellente excellent recommendations as far as color palette and mixing goes. Very appreciated!
Lead white is more lasting, titanium white creates not really strong layer of paint, I personally like zink though know it should be used cautiously, mostly for mixtures, and that's what I mostly do. Titanium is too opaque for me and kills all the colours. What I see is that many artists use these whites according to their own approach and it's good to learn all about these pigments to choose the one that really suits you. I'm a bit scared of using lead white but I want to try it anyway. I'm mostly concerned about cleaning brushes and pallette from it because if you accidentely touch it you can't wash hands with natural soap, and I'm allergic with synthetoc soap. So I understand why titanium became most common white, tough it's not perfect at all.
That you give away your color wheel for free tells me you truly want to help others not just make a fast buck off us “wannabe” artists. Thank you for your kindness and generosity. May you be blessed throughout your career!
Cannot believe that this information is available for free! God bless you!
We will charge you next time 😂
@@1974gladiateur :P
Totally agree. In Addition.....( Would you make a Specific video w mediums and drying times....i.e. I have paintings that Rrrrrr peeling and chipping / flaking from layering that I've spent 10+ years on.
I need some help with going forward at this point. Lost so much confidence painting after seeing those Paintings I have spent that much time on. 🤞🤞🤞
And I thought I had right.
I can show examples. Reply please I could use a hand up. I'm just so beatdown by this....
I really like Venetian read. I rarely use it because I have a tendency not to use the reds on my palette, but I have a tube of it and I’ve played with it. Lovely colour, great for flesh tones
Your professional approach and delivery of information is incredible. I paint as a hoppy and I listen to you intently God bless you, I learned so much from you 💋🙏🏻
Most of this I've learned before, but the way you explain things makes it worth re-learning.
Brother, this was one of the BEST made color theory/pallete videos out there. Excellent! Along side Andrew Tischler pallette vid. My pallette is the same...
Lead + Titanium white, Burnt Umber, Burnt Sienna, Trans Red + Yellow Oxide, Yellow Ocher, (sometimes Gen naples yellow M. Harding) Cad yellow light, Cad red light, cad red deep(sometimes), Quin magenta(always), Cobalt teal, and Ultramarine(sometimes Curelean) Blue, and thalo green....all Blue Ridge Oils, Windsor pro grade, Gamblin artists, or Rublev oils
I just love your approach to teaching. As a novice, your videos are so invaluable
Florent you’re an incredible master on still life paint!!You match it so realistic!!
Florent, you are very talented and likable, and your channel is pure gold.
Thank you for making your videos available. I often watch them more than once.
As I do also!
I'm a graphite artist wanting to go into oil painting so watching you to learn about what I need and how to begin is amazing and I know I will be super ready.
There's another channel that has a completely different approach called "Draw mix Paint". He only uses the primaries RYB plus burnt umber and white. Only 5 colors. The thing is he can pretty much do the same thing this guy does with realism, with the exception of the super bright colors like cobalt teal blue. May be an easier approach, but really do as you wish.
This channel is amazing, I absolutely love the way you present the topics, great narration, nice editing, great camera work, the extreme close up shots of the colors are sensational! Keep up the great work. Cheers!👍🏻🍀😎
love the feeling and passion you nurture towards art .inspires me so much.beautiful video
Great vid! For my portrait paintings I use a palette of Flake white replacement, transoxide yellow, transoxide red, vermillion, alizarin red permanent, viridian green, raw umber. Sometimes adding, ultra marine, naples yellow. For landscapes etc: the more modern cad hues and kobalt blue/ceruleum blue, titanium white. I never premix, I find it tedious and am not very organised!
I love your channel and your teaching method. This video is SUPER useful! I also got the PDF with the color wheel system for theory and practice. Fantastic! Thank you!
I loved the explanation for Cobalt Turquoise because just looking at a tube one tends to overlook the range of color mixes it enables.
Thank you so much for this and all your videos!!! I have downloaded the pdf . 🙏 Thanks for sharing it for free. You are a blessing!!!!! May you be very very very happy and healthy always .
You are so wonderful to a beginner artist! Thank you for all you do! I plan to buy the poster of your color wheel because it has so much information I need on it!
i really enjoy your videos about color theory.
So glad you nit only mention but use Munsell. Magenta and Cyan were integral to the freshman color and light course. You make the discussion not only rational but sensible.
As to my palette. Because pigments naturally vary in transparency, I have an extensive shelf of paints. my palette is very dynamic and many times there might be more than one pan set up. This has evolved over time as I have learned more about the pigments. I am fortunate to live quite close to a well-known artists paint company and they take my phone calls.
thank you for being an artist's artist and sharing your knowedge.
Florent, your videos have taught so many of us so much, and your joy is infectious. Thank you.
Brilliant! Very generous of you my friend.
Finding success with the Reilly Palette, I also enjoy using a modified Zorn palette. Zorn is a good palette for beginners bc it takes a lot of overthinking out of the equation
Thank you! You are a blessing to everyone!
Thank you. Your videos and courses are amazing, very detailed, to the point of just what I need to know. Many thanks...
great video! I always love to see which pigment are used by others!
I have my palette separated in left an right, with white in the middle. on the right hand side: sometimes unbleached titanium dioxide, yellow ochre, sometimes transparent yellow oxide, transparent oxide red, indian red, burnt umber, sometimes ivory black. on the left hand side: cadmium yellow light, sometimes a transparent yellow, cadmium red light, quinacridone magenta (pr122), ultramarine blue, phthalo blue green shade or cobalt teal (both good cyan ;-) ) and last but not least sometimes a green like viridian, phthalogreen or greengold.
Your comments during this video fit in so much with my own, from my earlier painting experience as a technical illustrator; now that I am at a later stage in my career, where I want explore and enjoy the use of colour, what you have taught here, is going to be so useful for myself personally, so I thank you sincerely. I have only recently come across your advice videos, but I will now view many more, as I think our styles are so similar, I believe that they will help my exploration and my consequent enjoyment.
even if I'm getting more into watercolour that video was really helpful with this important colour information.Thank you!
wow!! just amazing information, I need to keep watching your videos to keep learning.. you are a very unique and real, great artist..
Hi Florent, I watched your oil painting medium video and you did say how you can’t stand the smell of alkyd based mediums, I personally would recommend you try the gamblins solvent free fluid it is and alkyd resin however it’s made from safflower oil and it’s consistency is very similar to liquin fine details by Winsor and Newton.
Bar none, one of the best palette videos. Great theory and ultimate flexiblity.
Thank you, Florent! Good advise and updates of paint colors!
Lead white is absolutely amazing on a palette.
It just offers an amazing amount of flexibility and basically does everything Titanium white doesn't.
You're severely limited when it comes to glazing and scumbling without lead white. You can definitely do some incredible things with it.
It also tastes great!
@@henryglennon3864 I think Van Gogh preferred the yellows.
Glad to see you use phthalo green. I love it and there are so many artists who say to stay away from it.
Watching this it was so easy to confuse what was the subject and what was the painting. Brilliant :)
Amazing, and really useful information here. Thank you!
Thank you! Thank you for being such a great and kind teacher. )))
Titanium white, cad yellow lemon, yellow ochre, burnt umber, burnt sienna, alizarin crimson, cad red light, ultramarine blue, cerulean blue, viridian green & sap green give me most of the colors I need for portraits. I have been experimenting with more transparent paints for glazing with neo megilp. But that cyan is sooo beautiful, it will definitely be one of my next buys!
I've never used flake white, but I did use scarlet vermillion in one small painting. The amount of care I took to only put the vermillion on canvas, brush and waste jar (which then went to hazardous waste depot) meant that it was a higher anxiety project than usual. It's a strong but co-operative pigment - not overwhelming like the phthalos. I will never use it again, but I'm glad I did.
Thank you so much for these videos!
I have never used a color wheel before in my life and have no idea what I’m looking at but thank you for this video anyway!!
Zinc white for glazes and titanium for highlights have always worked for me.
Hi. Old Holland sells Cremnitz White, the best white there ever was. I went to my local art supply shop and straight asked them if they can bring me some and surprisingly they said yes. I waited about two weeks and I managed to buy two cans. The price was around 50 euros per can and the cans were not that big, however there is enough quantity for me to be happy for awhile. For reference, I live in the EU, Romania.
The lead white is the only white that will not chalk up light pastel colors and bar none the best white for use in glazing. My 2 cents.
Lithopone white PW5 ( I have a tube from Lukas) is the best white for glazing in my opinion. I don't have much experience with it ( I started using it only recently) , but it was a pleasant surprise . I like also the way it mixes with other colours. I'm using lithopone when I want more saturated mixes and for subtle glazing.
It's also non toxic and does not have the issues of the zinc oxides.
I'll see how it goes..
Just joined patreon, will increase it when able, thank you so much for all your videos!! I will be studying all.
Cobalt teal is one of my fav paint colour in the world!! I salivate.
Another excellent video full of information. I love how the color wheel shows where each tube color belongs. Do you have any chart showing the colors in order of transparencies, and another showing the transparency of the colors. That will be so helpful.
This is amazing Florent thank you so much when I have the money definitely going for your course thank you
I use a split complement palette of warm and cool. Red yellow blue burnt umber and white. Lots of different yellows. Cobalt teal also.
Thank you so much. Very instructive 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Thank you for this great lesson. God bless you every day.
Thank you for your candid approach in information!! Bravo
Talking of science, with Winsor and Newton Alkyd 80 range, I mixed every color with every other color, then ditto plus titanium white giving a matrix of about 3,000 colors, then sorted in primary groups and put in album. I only mix the colors for each part of a painting. Then the A4 mixes, at the end of a session seal them in polythene and put them in the freezer. Colours remain fresh, for me, up to a month.
I also use Ultramarine blue it is beautiful, also phthalo green,and titanium white. This was a very good video, thank you for all your videos.
Thank you for sharing, your paintings are beautiful I checked out your website. Inspiring to make me want to start painting
Amazingly informative and detailed. Thank you !
Simply excellent. Thanks Florent.
Well... When I was using acrylics I had quite a good selection of color tubes. The convenience of having pre-mixed colors, coupled with the difficulty of mixing acrylics and the quick drying time, somehow force you to have many colors. With oils have dramatically reduced the quantity. I don't use cyan yet, I use manganese blue, and don't use the phtalo green as don't find the need yet but more or less I have the same or similar colors as you do. In any case, thanks a lot for your good suggestions. Oh...forgot - I have Sap Green too which I think is quite useful.
God Bless You & Thank You😃I Love Titanuim White.
Thank you very much for the detailing of colours.
The Pyrrole red has a higher lightfastness anyway. So I am with you on that if you can’t or don’t want to use cadmium
Thanks for inspiring us keep going to your talent ☝🖌 happy new year i hope more videos to come in this year 😀
That’s a very bright yellow ochre, wow.
Thank you I so enjoyed this. God bless you
Thanks for sharing your colour mix tips. Its very helpfull for me. You are supercool as always 🔥🔥🔥
Thanks so much for sharing it with us! ❤
Thank you again for all this hugely valuable information.
Gamblin makes a lead white substitute which is a titanium white with the traditional handling properties of lead white.
I love watching your videos. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills! Can i ask, if I do not know how to draw, is it still possible to paint realistic images? Is there a technique for that? Or just quit 😅
Oh YES, awesome palette ♡
This video was so helpful thank you so much!
Try clove oil in the burnt umber. A couple drops in your pile and it will stay open 2 to 3 days.
Thank you for the video is very helpfull. I use white titanium altemerian blue. .cademion red and yellow . Yellow ochre. Brunet brown . Black. Cobalt blue . And terquize .
Outstanding video. Thank you!
Great video! I wish you’d offer one on ‘ colour mixing’… thanks
Wow! Cool.. thanks for sharing 👍🏻
I still not finished, liking it, but I must appriciate your way of speaking and body language , its super cooler
All your videos are good advice can you help please how to stop Liquin going thick in the bottle thank you
i love this painting you are making i enjoy your videos thank you
J'adore vos vidéos !! Elles sont top ! Et super anglais au passage !
Very useful, as always! Thank you 🙏🏻❤️
Once it is downloaded is there any way it can be professionally printed? Very, very helpful. Thank you.
Can you show us how you set up and light your still lifes? That example peice you're working on is gorgeous!
The quality is amazing! Great work!
So helpful dear artist thanks a lot 💐🌷⚘💎
Thank you, for sharing this wonderful information. :-)
You are uncredible!... THANKYOU!
✨Thank you ✨this so helpful !
Hello Florent, thank you for another amazing video. What brand of paints do you use? I just checked my Windsor & Newton colour chart and none of their numbers match the ones you gave us on here and colour names are not the same either. I thought pigment numbers were standard for all brands? Kind regards
I like the video. It was very informative. Thanks for the free color charts. I'm curious as to your pallette. What is it mad e from? Glass, metal or what.
I loved it ! TY so much
You're so welcome.
I loved you brother. Thank you 🌷
I’m voting for you
Great video!
Will the color wheel poster be coming back for sale? Will it ship to the USA?
Very informative.
May I disagree about Lead White. It was the greatest improvement of my palette because of the subtleties it permits, allowing to work with earths as I couldn't before. I'm glad titanium is enough for you, but I wouldn't change it for any other white
I'm very glad that you're aware of the comments. I'm considering to try Cobalt Teal, instead of Cerulean Blue, thought I allready use Viridian as a cold green, and I keep thinking that I'm not able to differentiate Viridian tints, from Cobalt Teal straight from the tube. What are your thoughts about it?
When do you use crimson vs magenta?
Hello? Can we use pb28 instead of pg50? What difference can be? I have gamblin cobalt teal blue (pb28) now I am thinking should buy a new williamsburg cobalt teal (pg50)
I noticed you use a professional ACRYLIC brush ¿is there any downsides using this brush when painting with oil?
I don't think you could even really import lead white, as it's banned from the EU I think. I can't seem to get it here in the Netherlands either. Also, the 'big' thing about lead white is how it is a white that will pretty much last for decades, contrary to some other 'modern' whites that are known to 'bleed or sweat oil' after like 50+ years or so. One of those modern whites is actually zinc white. It's a truly big problem in mid nineteenth century paintings. The zinc oxide forms zinc 'soaps' by reacting with other elements, which basically destroys a painting in the long-term (wherever a lot of zinc white was used). Anyway, excellente excellent recommendations as far as color palette and mixing goes. Very appreciated!
Lead white is more lasting, titanium white creates not really strong layer of paint, I personally like zink though know it should be used cautiously, mostly for mixtures, and that's what I mostly do. Titanium is too opaque for me and kills all the colours. What I see is that many artists use these whites according to their own approach and it's good to learn all about these pigments to choose the one that really suits you. I'm a bit scared of using lead white but I want to try it anyway. I'm mostly concerned about cleaning brushes and pallette from it because if you accidentely touch it you can't wash hands with natural soap, and I'm allergic with synthetoc soap. So I understand why titanium became most common white, tough it's not perfect at all.