@@kittykittybombomb143 Ahh... I get it, now. So it appears very creamy. However( assuming that you and the OP are not the very same person): Is that strictly your personal observation or..? 🤔
I used to work in a craft store, and the highest "loss" (shoplifted) areas were almost always the fine art paints/markers, and jewelry supplies. Partly because the cost adds up fast if you want the good stuff for your project... and partly because there's lots of small, valuable, easily re-sellable items you can shove into a bag or purse without breaking them.
@@Ava-ns4go it's all i can afford atm. I adore oil over acrylic, used it in a summer class and until I can buy my own I have my 50 cent acrylic bottles to use.
Ava Parker find that I like acrylics more because I find myself over blending a lot. The drying allows a restraint that is welcomed for me. It’s also much more affordable. I also find that when working with oils, they have a tendency to become muddy due to their mixing capabilities. I usually mix a slow drying medium into my acrylics before I start painting. Also, more expensive acrylics, like golden acrylics or liquitex have a longer drying time.
ive been using acrylic all my art career, im 15 yo and pretty much a beginner so icant afford to use this stuff, i cant really show u my part but i have one on my insta of black panther @timtam_26
*painting a picture* Jon: "This color is very nice, what shade is this?" Tim: "Your Mom" Jon: "Haha very funny Tim... but really, what shade is this?" Tim: "...." Jon: "Tim.." Jon: "What did you do to my mother?" Tim: "....." Jon: "....." Tim: *"You're next, Jon."*
As someone who works in a paint department this was very interesting to watch; and learn about the processes and history of oil paint. I always wondered why the oil paint was more expensive I just figured it was only because of the extra durability and longevity.
watercolors are actually more expensive than oil paints by weight. but since it's meant to be diluted with water, you don't actually need a lot of paint.
I dont really know exaclty how watercolor is made, but the difference between cheap and expensive watercolor is much more noticable than other materials, even for begginers. So i believe that It must be much more difficult to produce
Finally Some one else Notices that..! Thats correct that we do not need a lot of Paint when it comes to watercolor and watercolor lasts longer then oil of the same weight that that does not justify it being more expensive. companies charge for the pigments and the ingredients used in a tube and not how much Paintings and Artist can get out of that tube. its just like saying that an oil Painter who paints very thin should be charged more for the same tube then an oil painter who Paints very thick since hell run out that tube sooner..!
This explains why Van Gogh was struggling to even eat. My young dumb ass thought paints back in his day were cheap like they are today. It's a wonder he didn't die sooner. I totally get the ear thing now.
If you’ve ever seen a Van Gogh in person, he took that paint straight from the tube and laid the paint down really thick. He also had a suspected borderline personality disorder.
@@muhammadrauf2600 i actually heard that he gave her the ear because he wanted to tell her that she's not alone in this world or smth, i don't rlly understand him lmao
A lot of the metals used to make some paint pigments are toxic and can have deadly reactions with very common chemicals. Some of the more “special” artists from history may even have gone a little crazy because of these metals and chemicals. Some oil paints can also take months or even years to fully dry. Oil painting is pretty hardcore
@@ChristopherGray00 Lead White (lead carbonate) did... And the cool think is that it wasn't just used in oil paints. It was also used in cosmetics. Mild lead poisoning is associated with aggressive/irritable behaviour, apathy, lack of empathy and finding grotesque things humours.... so "crazy" for short. And since organic lead compounds accumulate in both fat, nerve and bone tissue it is borderline permanent.
@@andersjjensen lead can induce psychosis, many substances can induce that, but there is no known compound that can induce permanent psychosis. there is no literature that even suggests lead causes permanent psychosis.
I've had the same 12 small tubes for a couple years now because they are (for how cheap they were, surprisingly) good and work best when thinned out. I've also bought those paint by number sets and found that most of those use oil paints. Some are actually good quality too
@@gimmerqueen that's so messed up. "Oh Bella this cake is wonderful, what spices did you use?" "Oh you know. We stole bodies from a historic grave, and decided to grind them up and it them! Isnt it wonderful"
I need to show this to my parents so they understand why I was so pissed when they let my little sister play with my oil paints. Edit for clarification: I bought the oil paints with the first paycheck I got from my first part-time job. Because I wanted nice stuff, I bought mid-range quality paints, which were ruined when they let my sister, who was 8 at the time, paint with them. It ruined my brushes and my favorite and most expensive colors were completely used.
@@linearwilt9853 no word of a lie I about cried. I had spent my entire first paycheck at my first real job on decent paints. Thank god my folks replaced them. When they saw how much they cost though I think my dad about had a heart attack.
The artists did not know they were mummies, manufacturers were scamming them basically, and they stopped buying it when it got out. The equally good, normal brown also available at the time that they were pretending it was was just refined brown rust. Grabbing a mummy lying around was cheaper though that manufacturing a whole barrel of rust and cleaning and processing it etc.
Imagine living your Egyptian life as a king and highly honoured person, dying, being mummified and thousands of years later being turned into _paint_ .
+Bryan Santana Creativity in necessity I guess. Someone also saw a cow taking a piss and thought, "Wow, what a beautiful color! This pigment should be used for painting."
Kareem Almond th-cam.com/video/ekzrn3-nu1s/w-d-xo.html she did a simple introduction to oil painting and her paintings are gorgeous i discovered her through her Marzia one
Well, I prefer to grind my own pigments and oils. It helps me really get in touch with the craft. The whole process of making the paint and then painting with it is very important and beautiful to me. But I don't do it professionally, so I'm not that focused on how long it holds up for
@MiniCraftyClub, white water color isn’t technically watercolor, and it isn’t necessary to make paintings, because water will automatically lighten colours the same way.
yeah, except ink jet ink is intentionally inflated by the companies that produce them by about 50 to 60 dollars. seriously it costs them cents to make that stuff, not sure why mark ups like that are even legal
Well it says "so expensive" twice in the title, so I figured, I should give it a try. And yes, oil colours are indeed expensive, as the video explains. 10/10, was interesting and the way the lady said "gorgeous" at the end, was well worth the watch. 👍🏻
To be fair, most professional traditional oil painters use just five different pigments and mix every other colour from these. Also, oil paint goes a long way: a tiny amount can cover a very large surface. You can spread oil paint very thin without it losing its vibrancy.
So true. Properly grounded pigment in Oil vehicle can encapsulate more pigment than a water binder - so it has more brilliance and covering power, as well as still retaining gloss, permanency and insolubility. Water paints loaded with the same amount of pigment will dry matte and may still partially dissolve in water or in subsequent layering.
@@Hades-Sired that only applies to modern painting. Back when oil paint was created no one was adding thick layers of paint to the canvas, even if the painting contained multiple layers of paint, hence why the surface of the old paintings is generally really smooth
I've been painting off and on since the late 60s. There are many grades of oil paints for painters. Everything from 'student grade' to very expensive professional grades. Unless you are a top tier pro and command prices to match, you don't really need the best stuff. About 90% of painters will do just fine on anything they can get at Michaels, Dick Blick, or any of the other art supply outlet. Not every painting is done with a thought to posterity or lasting for hundreds of years. I consider the vast majority of my stuff as mostly homework assignments. They are a learning exercise, a way to try out and experiment with ideas. Not every brush stroke is magic. It's a step in an ongoing process. Some things work out and a lot doesn't. You can liken it to an athlete training. Training sessions are just that; training. Not every session is a Superbowl or World Series or the finals at Wimbledon. There are a lot of paintings that never see the light of day. Paint manufacturers put out a rainbow of colors, but you basically need less than a dozen. Really only three plus white. The primaries of a red, a blue, and a yellow. You can mix any color from those three and white.
Very good points, but IMO not exactly because of the reasons you base them on. Today, pigment technologies have advanced so much, mainly thanks to demands from car lacquers and ceramic tiling, that many durable pigments are available at reasonable price points. There are still "student grades", that deserve to still be classed as student grade or maybe rather 'Hobby grade'. But the "Student" market leaders, Winton, Georgian, Van Gogh, Cotman, Aquafine, Galleria, System 3, .. have silently advanced into what must be considered 'Budget Artist Paints', rather than 'Student grade'. The ranges don't offer so big selections, they don't feature the most expensive pigments, and they're not quite as strong as premium artist paints, but in all other regards they're good enough for durable fine art purposes. There are IMO reasons why you should still choose durable paints, even if you're on a budget and consider your painting just exercise or a hobby. First of all, I've seen enough green-grey paintings that someone's talented great aunt painted with cheap stuff not so long ago (main reason they get a green cast is the low lightfastness of the reds they have used, and also from using Alizarine Crimson as a tinting color, minus-green, in mixing). And I have to think: What a waste, how unnecessary. The second reason for buying durable paints, is that if we don't, then we are participating in skewing the market demand, making real artist materials even more expensive. We cannot leave it solely to a handful of professional artists, who can prosper on their art, to support the artist materials market. It really isn't a good practice to use only only three bright paints to mix colors. Most bright reds, magentas and yellows have a weakness. While this weakness is insignificant and irrelevant most of the time, it's greatly and exponentially amplified, the less paint you use, particularly in a mix with a complementary color. If you need to adjust a blue, green, grey, brown color, you should use a red ochre, if possible, instead of a bright red. That's why you should do as the great classical masters, build as much as possible on Iron oxide and Iron hydroxide pigments: Yellow Ochre, Light Red, Venetian Red, Indian Red, Raw and Burnt Sienna, Transparent Red Oxide, Transparent Yellow Oxide... You don't even need them all. With some of those dull yellows and reds, combined with Ultramarine and some carbon black, you can do most things in natural, representative painting. You do need a cold blue, like a PB15:3 Phthalo, a bright yellow, a bright red, a quinacridone magenta. A Phthalo green is also nice to base your greens on, with Ochre or raw Sienna. But unless you're painting flowers, you don't need much of those colors, and can buy them in small tubes. As long as your Ochres and Siennas are the real thing (and not some Korean paint mixed together from cheap, strong Azo printing ink pigments), they're just as completely permanent in the cheap brands as in the Premium. Same goes for Ultramarine (unless it's some Russian paint "improved" with a fugitive dye).
This is why I do digital art: 1) Every pigment is free and I don’t have to buy new ones 2) Erasing is extremely easy 3) I can delete my trash art so people don’t go blind
@Bell Ortua Yeah I’m not a really good artist but usually when I’m thinking about drawing I first start with just drawing irl and then moving to digital cause it’s easier for me to draw irl.
Here's a few tips for new artists - Student grade paints are fine, but always buy professional grades of white and, to a lesser extent, yellows. White is actually your most used colour and will be in most of your mixes and it needs to be good and cover well. Basic palette? - start with just - Titanium White, Process Yellow, Magenta, Cyan and Burnt Umber and that's it. Add in a tube of Hooker's Green or Sap Green, unless you want to get through an awful lot of yellow! Apart from white, just about every colour you lay down will be a mix and the above will allow you to mix just about every colour there is.
potato paradise Its because people who want free artwork don’t respect the art, don’t acknowledge the amount of hours of experience the artist has accumulated, and they also might just be assholes who don’t want to pay.
An artist in the 19th century, named Edward Burne-Jones, actually buried his mummy brown paint tube in his garden when he found out that it was really made of dead bodies, not just a funny silly name
Professional pigments are made sometimes from very rare minerals that can be really expensive because they were over mined in the past or are really hard to find and produce at cheap costs. Mineral pigments often work better with paints than synthetic ones, but I know this from watercolor so it might be different for paints? But the pigment your probably using for slime is synthetic since a lot of mineral pigments for paints can actually be extremely toxic to touch or inhale!
Me: It's 10pm i don't have a time to watch this, i'm going to sleep. My Brain at 2am: *ARE YOU SURE YOU DIDN'T WANT TO KNOW WHY PAINT OIL IS EXPENSIVE?!!!*
I never understood why my mom would beat the life out of me when I used her oil paints when I was 7. It’s because the ones I was using WHERE 200 EACH 💀
In Austin, Texas, occasionally University of Texas students will take an art class for a semester and then get tired of it. And at the end the year, when mom and dad come to pick them up, if it doesn’t fit in their vehicle, it gets tossed. I used to dumpster dive in May and find all sorts of treasures, including full tubes of pigmented paints.
Fun story. I bought a cool ring second hand. Big stone. Too small for me but I liked the blue. Turned out to be Lapis lazuli. Had it on my dresser for about three weeks. Liked looking at it. One Sunday morning, for no real reason, felt inclined to stuff it into my pocket. A lady at church, who is a bit of an outlier, shows up wearing a scarf exactly the color and speckling of the ring. I walk up to her, "This is for you." and hand her the ring. :) That was years ago and it still makes me smile.
Back in the 1800s they made a chemical process for mass producing the molecularly identical substance as lapis gemstone from scratch, so modern ultramarine is pretty cheap. And identical/better than the old stuff (purer, no rock mixed in, etc). There's zero reason anymore to use the actual gemstone other than being a hipster.
“Oil paint is a mixture of oil and paint.” 👁👄👁 Edit: Wow, how did my dumb comment get so many likes? Also I love how everyone is responding with "he said oil and pigment" I misquoted on purpose lmao
This really puts our whole world into perspective. All these beautiful pigments that people have to put this much effort to reproduce in a physical sense just straight up exists as a natural thing in the rest of our world
There's plenty of very cheap botanical based pigments too that more closely follow those you see in nature normally, but they aren't very good for oil painting because they fade over months/years. For a flower that only exist sin spring, that doesn't matter to the plant. For a painter it is a big problem. So the expensive ones have to be usually mineral based.
My aunt was an artist. She plied her art for over 50 years when she switched from oil painting to ceramics. She asked me over to help clean out her studio. She pointed to two closets and three old dressers all jam packed with artist supplies. That is when I inherited around five hundred tubes of oil paint. About half of them were partially used and about half never opened. They were almost all usable. She wanted to rent a dumpster her studio had that much stuff in it. Instead I rented a van. I have hardly bought any art supplies since and that was 25 years ago and I've only used maybe 5% of what she gave me so far. The only thing I really ran out of was canvas. I don't even want to imagine how much she paid for all of that. When she died 20 years ago at the age of 85 she left her ceramics equipment and supplies to my cousin.
I'VE BEEN SEEING POST EVERYWHERE ABOUT FOREX TRADING AND CRYPTO CURRENCY, A LOT OF PEOPLE KEEP SAYING THINGS ABOUT THIS TRADING PLATFORMS PLEASE CAN SOMEONE LINK ME TO SOMEBODY WHO CAN PUT ME THROUGH..?
Wow l'm just shock someone mentioned expert Mrs Olivera Jane okhumalo, I thought I'm the only one trading with her, She helped me recover what i lost trying to trade my self.
Don't know where you live or are from but check our hobby lobby. Pretty sure you can shop there online and it is more affordable than Michaels and some of the others. If you catch their sales they can be very reasonable.
Ahahah I know you have gone to a shop and see those flowers for a crispy 20 and let's me honest your not gonna find good flowers unless you get it from your neighbours garden
@5:06 you can keep working on a piece for years? did she say layer and scraping like actually scraping the paint away and redoing the piece all over again until it is exactly how you want it? is that actually possible 😮
I'm glad to know that I'm not the only one who thinks the paint looks low key delicious, even though it's paint
“delicious”??? 🤔
Maaz Kalim it looks like ice cream lmao
Man ...if its made from dead bodies ?!?!? 💀
It taste better than it looks
@@kittykittybombomb143 Ahh...
I get it, now.
So it appears very creamy.
However( assuming that you and the OP are not the very same person): Is that strictly your personal observation or..? 🤔
"We quickly ran out of mummies to use."
Never thought I'd hear those words.
Same
Me
Wtf ikr
i thought "maybe they realized how creepy/ unmoral/disrespectful that was..." NOPE
Literally
"We quickly ran out of mummies to use."
That's a sentence you don't hear in normal, everyday conversations.
How are we supposed to get the fleash tones now?
Well at least now we dont have to worry about mummies coming back to life
....ikr
madness
lol. explains why there's haunted paintings.
Watching these blending machines and colourful oil stacks alone is extremely satisfying! ☺️
Yo, I love your channel!
If someone doesn't mummify me after I die, grind me into a pigment, and use me to paint the next mona lisa, then I'm not dying.
Nana • LOL
Better make some calls quick to make sure that'll happen... You know while you're still breathing xD
Nana • that’s deep I should write that on my will
Nana • um...ok....
Nana • 😂😂
Ultra marine is such an amazingly gorgeous pigment... looking at it I almost think it is the most beautiful color I have ever seen!
gold will always be the best for me
It hurt my eyes tbh
Ultramarines are the children of Row Boat Girly-Man and we love them for it.
IKR
I only like it cause its lapis and its in minecraft
Do you know that other than making blue dye, lapis lazuli can be used to enchant your tools
I see a man of culture
Yes, a minecwaft fan.
@@cryptixdt u/uwutranslator
@@qutaibaabumatar6015 Hi potartor named Bob Potato
i love you
Now I know why there’s cameras above the oil paint section at Michael’s.
I used to work in a craft store, and the highest "loss" (shoplifted) areas were almost always the fine art paints/markers, and jewelry supplies. Partly because the cost adds up fast if you want the good stuff for your project... and partly because there's lots of small, valuable, easily re-sellable items you can shove into a bag or purse without breaking them.
Hey I was just there not to long ago.. lol 😆 wow thats so true.. people like to steal them..
Nerd!
Why were you looking for the cameras?
Booo michael’s.
Meanwhile in Egypt:
"Omg, girl, that colour looks so good on you!"
"Thanks! I got it from my great grandma."
Ooffff
RedPineapple~ 🤣🤣🤣
😂 wasn’t expecting that
Lol 😂 😂 😂 😂
My Egyptian self is crying
Oil paints: *takes so long to dry*
Acrylic paint: *drys before you can even blend*
i literally have no idea why people love acrylic paints, its a bloody nightmare and tacky as all hell to work with
@@Ava-ns4go it's all i can afford atm. I adore oil over acrylic, used it in a summer class and until I can buy my own I have my 50 cent acrylic bottles to use.
Ava Parker find that I like acrylics more because I find myself over blending a lot. The drying allows a restraint that is welcomed for me. It’s also much more affordable. I also find that when working with oils, they have a tendency to become muddy due to their mixing capabilities. I usually mix a slow drying medium into my acrylics before I start painting. Also, more expensive acrylics, like golden acrylics or liquitex have a longer drying time.
ive been using acrylic all my art career, im 15 yo and pretty much a beginner so icant afford to use this stuff, i cant really show u my part but i have one on my insta of black panther @timtam_26
Pretty off topic but, your name ma lord. PREACH!
*painting a picture*
Jon: "This color is very nice, what shade is this?"
Tim: "Your Mom"
Jon: "Haha very funny Tim... but really, what shade is this?"
Tim: "...."
Jon: "Tim.."
Jon: "What did you do to my mother?"
Tim: "....."
Jon: "....."
Tim: *"You're next, Jon."*
This one is funny. This made my day, thanks.
Byakuya Togami this made me laugh out loud. I feel like this is a conversation me and my friend would have... jokingly though
😂😂😂
Imagine someone saying this to you
Whheeezzeee
As someone who works in a paint department this was very interesting to watch; and learn about the processes and history of oil paint. I always wondered why the oil paint was more expensive I just figured it was only because of the extra durability and longevity.
As someone who’s seen paint before, I agree
@@michaelhiggins9791 As someone who's read satire, that was very amusing.
"Oil paint will last for hundreds of years"
Me: *looking at my oil paintings* oh god
500 years in the future: Nobody really knows how the Tina-precsionist movement started...
tina Well you can still paint over your paintings and cover them up (if you don't like them)
Yes, quite embarrassing
HAHAHAHA Same!
Sam H. It's preferable to sell a good quality artwork made with passion than just something you want to get rid off
watercolors are actually more expensive than oil paints by weight. but since it's meant to be diluted with water, you don't actually need a lot of paint.
Damn I guess I should oil paints
I used to use watercolor just like that instead of drying it then diluting it and I got so confused as to why I ran out so fast
I dont really know exaclty how watercolor is made, but the difference between cheap and expensive watercolor is much more noticable than other materials, even for begginers. So i believe that It must be much more difficult to produce
It’s the canvas or paper for watercolour that get to me
Finally Some one else Notices that..! Thats correct that we do not need a lot of Paint when it comes to watercolor and watercolor lasts longer then oil of the same weight that that does not justify it being more expensive. companies charge for the pigments and the ingredients used in a tube and not how much Paintings and Artist can get out of that tube. its just like saying that an oil Painter who paints very thin should be charged more for the same tube then an oil painter who Paints very thick since hell run out that tube sooner..!
This explains why Van Gogh was struggling to even eat. My young dumb ass thought paints back in his day were cheap like they are today. It's a wonder he didn't die sooner. I totally get the ear thing now.
If you’ve ever seen a Van Gogh in person, he took that paint straight from the tube and laid the paint down really thick. He also had a suspected borderline personality disorder.
He had a tinnitus thats why he cut his ear off. He thought it would go away.
If I cut off a piece of my ear and gave it to a lady, I'm pretty sure the police will come and then straight to the mental institution lol 😁
@@muhammadrauf2600 I would gladly except your ear...ish
@@muhammadrauf2600 i actually heard that he gave her the ear because he wanted to tell her that she's not alone in this world or smth, i don't rlly understand him lmao
A lot of the metals used to make some paint pigments are toxic and can have deadly reactions with very common chemicals. Some of the more “special” artists from history may even have gone a little crazy because of these metals and chemicals. Some oil paints can also take months or even years to fully dry. Oil painting is pretty hardcore
no compound make you "go crazy" permanently.
@@ChristopherGray00 Lead White (lead carbonate) did... And the cool think is that it wasn't just used in oil paints. It was also used in cosmetics. Mild lead poisoning is associated with aggressive/irritable behaviour, apathy, lack of empathy and finding grotesque things humours.... so "crazy" for short. And since organic lead compounds accumulate in both fat, nerve and bone tissue it is borderline permanent.
@@ChristopherGray00 organic mercury can make you go insane from permanent brain damage
@@andersjjensen lead can induce psychosis, many substances can induce that, but there is no known compound that can induce permanent psychosis.
there is no literature that even suggests lead causes permanent psychosis.
@@ChristopherGray00 tbf they never said permanently
When i was a kid, i used to play with my uncle's oil paint
Now i know why he was so angry at me
...I used to eat it...
trîck or trèat god bless you
Kobar Ariatna he was probably more worried because it’s SUPER toxic and dangerous, I’d be concerned if he was mad just because it was expensive lmao
Poor uncle
now i know why my mom smacked me so hard when i emptied all of my grandmas paints
Note to self:
Don’t lick oil paintings made before the 19th century
Note to self: don’t lick oil paintings at all
do you just,,, lick paintings in ur free time or
@@flrtpyo1076 wait.. you don't?
Way to go gurrlll
True. Might accidentally lick cow peepee or snails.
Everyone: Oil paints
Me: *F O R B I D D E N F R O S T I N G*
This comment gives me life
Lol!! 😄💗🌷
Frosting?
Someone: Can you pass me the YELLOW oil paint?
Me: Oh you mean the "Fancy Cheese Whiz?"
Y es
I've had the same 12 small tubes for a couple years now because they are (for how cheap they were, surprisingly) good and work best when thinned out. I've also bought those paint by number sets and found that most of those use oil paints. Some are actually good quality too
"And while the color was perfect for some flesh tones, we quickly ran out of mummies to use"
Dude why not make some?
nara tsa We do now, it’s called synthetic pigment.
@@alexa6709 no the mummies
I-
if I die I volunteer to be a mummy and be used for making paint
*I can forever live with your masterpiece*
r/cursedcomments
It's creeps me out that they were crushing up mummies to make a color
I know and it’s so disrespectful.
@@TheEldenLord_ they condoned slavery abuse and whatnot. Meh
They actually also ate them as a spice
Gimmerqueen really ???
@@gimmerqueen that's so messed up.
"Oh Bella this cake is wonderful, what spices did you use?"
"Oh you know. We stole bodies from a historic grave, and decided to grind them up and it them! Isnt it wonderful"
I need to show this to my parents so they understand why I was so pissed when they let my little sister play with my oil paints.
Edit for clarification: I bought the oil paints with the first paycheck I got from my first part-time job. Because I wanted nice stuff, I bought mid-range quality paints, which were ruined when they let my sister, who was 8 at the time, paint with them. It ruined my brushes and my favorite and most expensive colors were completely used.
@@linearwilt9853 towards me or towards them?
@@linearwilt9853 no word of a lie I about cried. I had spent my entire first paycheck at my first real job on decent paints. Thank god my folks replaced them. When they saw how much they cost though I think my dad about had a heart attack.
@@linearwilt9853 tell me about it. Now to get them to stop letting her use my brushes then everything will be just fine 😂
@@res1dentcyn1c pffff oh my god 💀
I can't imagine that. 😶
The title: "Paint!"
My brain: "Butter?"
My eyes: Sees Paint
My nose: Smells Paint
My ears: Hears Smudge Noises
My brain: I WANT TO EAT IT
@Rachel ASHTON OH NO
You can eat anything but somethings you can eat only once
Excuse me but is no one going to ask how you managed to “smell” paint lmao
We really have no free will
Same😂
*painting is cursed/haunted*
Us: “Omg how?1”
Also us:
“Haha dead mummies”
-Go brrr
Nooo! You couldn't use a dead body just for a paint!
Haha, mummies go bruouououooh
wow look at ur comment subs
*now thats haunted*
goodness poor people!
“hehe corpsey make painty!”
"hahahah haunted mummie paint go BRRRRRRRR
*3 AM*
TH-cam Recommended: Why is oil paint so expensive?
Me: *i don't need sleep, i need answers*
Frendxhy underrated
underrated comment
Me right now🤣
4 AM for me
Katara is it relly you
I’ve never wanted to eat oil paint before. Now I’ve seen people scoop it up like ice cream and I’m second guessing that choice.
Haha me too, it just looks sooooo buttery and nice
that’s kind of rude picking up someone’s body and grinding it into pigment lol.
I guess lol i mean I'm definitely weirded out but hey I'm dead so I'm sure not caring at this point
Well it does turn them into a masterpiece
They weren’t using it anymore.
People used to snort the mummy powder too if we’re talking about how disrespectful they were
trxshy my last will and testament.
“that’s such an ugly color”
u callin my grandma ugly?
😂😂😂😂😂
Yes
😂😭
R/cursedcomments
its a Tilly r/foundthemobileuser
Me: I ran out of flesh tones again..
16-19 century artist: Time to grind up ol' Tut.
Hahahahaha! XD
Hah!
Lmao😂😂😂😂😂
The artists did not know they were mummies, manufacturers were scamming them basically, and they stopped buying it when it got out. The equally good, normal brown also available at the time that they were pretending it was was just refined brown rust. Grabbing a mummy lying around was cheaper though that manufacturing a whole barrel of rust and cleaning and processing it etc.
This is the information I was curious about while drawing oil paintings, but I'm glad you organized it neatly.
Imagine living your Egyptian life as a king and highly honoured person, dying, being mummified and thousands of years later being turned into _paint_ .
and then being used to paint a high quality meme and posted on reddit only to get like 2 upvotes
@@idrinksemenforbreakfast4496 o
@@idrinksemenforbreakfast4496 nononono, some dude makes you into an anime girl
Then turned into art.
@@aimohsin1380 that would be an even higher honor
Imagine discovering a tombstone of a human dating back thousands of years and thinking "I'm going to grind their remains to use in a painting.
+Bryan Santana Creativity in necessity I guess. Someone also saw a cow taking a piss and thought, "Wow, what a beautiful color! This pigment should be used for painting."
I’ve ran out of brown... Nan you’ll have to do.
I mean we looked at chickens thought “I should kill it, chop it up, put it over a fire and put it in my mouth”.
the ultimate power move
@@allthatglittersisntgold8330 Killing animals and eating their flesh happens in nature, so its not a big leap.
Me: has no idea what oil paint is
“why oil paint is so expensive”
Also me: perfect
Lol same
Boii u gotta know what oil paint is thats what mona lisa and history uses lol
Kareem Almond th-cam.com/video/ekzrn3-nu1s/w-d-xo.html
she did a simple introduction to oil painting and her paintings are gorgeous
i discovered her through her Marzia one
Also me: oh ASMR!!
Who doesnt know what an oil paint is!?
Well, I prefer to grind my own pigments and oils. It helps me really get in touch with the craft. The whole process of making the paint and then painting with it is very important and beautiful to me. But I don't do it professionally, so I'm not that focused on how long it holds up for
not true
Meanwhile in watercolor land:
"This single tube of pink will last you your entire life."
Holy sheet YES
What about the white one lol
@MiniCraftyClub, white water color isn’t technically watercolor, and it isn’t necessary to make paintings, because water will automatically lighten colours the same way.
Hello thanks for the information 😊
Unless your Japanese
Me: wow look at all that oil paint!
instincts: *_it's frosting, lets eat it_*
Karen nah it’s cheese
No, it's cream cheese
Karen The prohibited gourmet frosting
I am the *real Karen*
Cheesecake......
Oil paints: we’re expensive!
Ink jet cartridges: hold my 24-karat gold beer can.
yeah, except ink jet ink is intentionally inflated by the companies that produce them by about 50 to 60 dollars. seriously it costs them cents to make that stuff, not sure why mark ups like that are even legal
Next: Why ink jet cartridge is so expensive
@@ThePalatineHill because there is no competition
@@ThePalatineHill because they sell the printer to you for below cost and make money back selling ink.
@@ThePalatineHill
It is capitalism and free market bullshit that lets people argue for their right to gouge the crap out of our wallets.
Well it says "so expensive" twice in the title, so I figured, I should give it a try. And yes, oil colours are indeed expensive, as the video explains. 10/10, was interesting and the way the lady said "gorgeous" at the end, was well worth the watch. 👍🏻
As a professional, I prefer 64 packs of Crayola crayons
The Great CooLite yup pick the 64 packs of crayola instead of the annoying oil paint its useless if its not dried enough
Time to flex on the kids with that 64 pack
Pencil or wax
We have a man of culture here
Perfection
For all my life I always wanted to know why OIL PAINT is so expensive
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😝
@@BarakaWaswa ikr 😂😂😂😂
well it could be fun for a curious artists to know and learn
@@milknight5181 Boi he aint serious
Bro that’s a dumb question. When clearly oil paint has a much finer quality to it
To be fair, most professional traditional oil painters use just five different pigments and mix every other colour from these. Also, oil paint goes a long way: a tiny amount can cover a very large surface. You can spread oil paint very thin without it losing its vibrancy.
oooooooooo
I don't paint but I still thought that was a very cool fact.
So true. Properly grounded pigment in Oil vehicle can encapsulate more pigment than a water binder - so it has more brilliance and covering power, as well as still retaining gloss, permanency and insolubility. Water paints loaded with the same amount of pigment will dry matte and may still partially dissolve in water or in subsequent layering.
My father do this. He is very wary with his oil paints. But he can make it last a fckng lot.
@@Hades-Sired that only applies to modern painting. Back when oil paint was created no one was adding thick layers of paint to the canvas, even if the painting contained multiple layers of paint, hence why the surface of the old paintings is generally really smooth
I've been painting off and on since the late 60s. There are many grades of oil paints for painters. Everything from 'student grade' to very expensive professional grades. Unless you are a top tier pro and command prices to match, you don't really need the best stuff. About 90% of painters will do just fine on anything they can get at Michaels, Dick Blick, or any of the other art supply outlet. Not every painting is done with a thought to posterity or lasting for hundreds of years. I consider the vast majority of my stuff as mostly homework assignments. They are a learning exercise, a way to try out and experiment with ideas. Not every brush stroke is magic. It's a step in an ongoing process. Some things work out and a lot doesn't. You can liken it to an athlete training. Training sessions are just that; training. Not every session is a Superbowl or World Series or the finals at Wimbledon. There are a lot of paintings that never see the light of day.
Paint manufacturers put out a rainbow of colors, but you basically need less than a dozen. Really only three plus white. The primaries of a red, a blue, and a yellow. You can mix any color from those three and white.
Very good points, but IMO not exactly because of the reasons you base them on. Today, pigment technologies have advanced so much, mainly thanks to demands from car lacquers and ceramic tiling, that many durable pigments are available at reasonable price points. There are still "student grades", that deserve to still be classed as student grade or maybe rather 'Hobby grade'. But the "Student" market leaders, Winton, Georgian, Van Gogh, Cotman, Aquafine, Galleria, System 3, .. have silently advanced into what must be considered 'Budget Artist Paints', rather than 'Student grade'. The ranges don't offer so big selections, they don't feature the most expensive pigments, and they're not quite as strong as premium artist paints, but in all other regards they're good enough for durable fine art purposes.
There are IMO reasons why you should still choose durable paints, even if you're on a budget and consider your painting just exercise or a hobby. First of all, I've seen enough green-grey paintings that someone's talented great aunt painted with cheap stuff not so long ago (main reason they get a green cast is the low lightfastness of the reds they have used, and also from using Alizarine Crimson as a tinting color, minus-green, in mixing). And I have to think: What a waste, how unnecessary. The second reason for buying durable paints, is that if we don't, then we are participating in skewing the market demand, making real artist materials even more expensive. We cannot leave it solely to a handful of professional artists, who can prosper on their art, to support the artist materials market.
It really isn't a good practice to use only only three bright paints to mix colors. Most bright reds, magentas and yellows have a weakness. While this weakness is insignificant and irrelevant most of the time, it's greatly and exponentially amplified, the less paint you use, particularly in a mix with a complementary color. If you need to adjust a blue, green, grey, brown color, you should use a red ochre, if possible, instead of a bright red.
That's why you should do as the great classical masters, build as much as possible on Iron oxide and Iron hydroxide pigments: Yellow Ochre, Light Red, Venetian Red, Indian Red, Raw and Burnt Sienna, Transparent Red Oxide, Transparent Yellow Oxide... You don't even need them all. With some of those dull yellows and reds, combined with Ultramarine and some carbon black, you can do most things in natural, representative painting. You do need a cold blue, like a PB15:3 Phthalo, a bright yellow, a bright red, a quinacridone magenta. A Phthalo green is also nice to base your greens on, with Ochre or raw Sienna. But unless you're painting flowers, you don't need much of those colors, and can buy them in small tubes.
As long as your Ochres and Siennas are the real thing (and not some Korean paint mixed together from cheap, strong Azo printing ink pigments), they're just as completely permanent in the cheap brands as in the Premium. Same goes for Ultramarine (unless it's some Russian paint "improved" with a fugitive dye).
Magenta, yellow and cyan
Imagine painting with somebody’s remains
Disgusting 💩
Niyati Tyagi no problem
murders be like
That seems disrespectful
Seems cool
We need a "why Copic Markers are so expensive" seven dollars is a lot for a single marker
👏👏👏Yas!
yes, this.
Probably there is no particular reason
@@er-xj8sn there high quality compared to most brands or markers
@@rae8061 its still overpriced lmao
This is why I do digital art:
1) Every pigment is free and I don’t have to buy new ones
2) Erasing is extremely easy
3) I can delete my trash art so people don’t go blind
To each their own ^^. Each medium has their own cons and prons. Both can be beautiful when done well :)
:)
Bhell Ortua idk man, i fell into the rabbit hole of buying way more supplies than i need xdd
Also better for the environment.
@Bell Ortua
Yeah I’m not a really good artist but usually when I’m thinking about drawing I first start with just drawing irl and then moving to digital cause it’s easier for me to draw irl.
Here's a few tips for new artists - Student grade paints are fine, but always buy professional grades of white and, to a lesser extent, yellows. White is actually your most used colour and will be in most of your mixes and it needs to be good and cover well.
Basic palette? - start with just - Titanium White, Process Yellow, Magenta, Cyan and Burnt Umber and that's it. Add in a tube of Hooker's Green or Sap Green, unless you want to get through an awful lot of yellow! Apart from white, just about every colour you lay down will be a mix and the above will allow you to mix just about every colour there is.
And people still want *_free_* comissions........I mean wtf!!!
potato paradise Its because people who want free artwork don’t respect the art, don’t acknowledge the amount of hours of experience the artist has accumulated, and they also might just be assholes who don’t want to pay.
People feel entitled to free stuff in today’s society.
/rslash choosingbeggers
@@zhianxu7992 ????
People are just :p always gonna be
Back then..
"Quick we're running out of brown paint"
"But sir, we ran out of mummy"
*shock pikachu face*
My. LO once👌🏻
I know where I'm donating my collection
Just grab 10yrs old dead peoples
An artist in the 19th century, named Edward Burne-Jones, actually buried his mummy brown paint tube in his garden when he found out that it was really made of dead bodies, not just a funny silly name
I paint my toilet brown every day....
Wait...I struggle using crayons *why am I here?*
because deep down, you know it's the crayons... not you....
@@Change-Maker that's true
@@Change-Maker That's a stupid thought process tbh
@@HilbertXVI crayons are always bad.
Crayons are for kids, idk how to use it professionally 😅
Being mummified with the express intent to become paint should absolutely be an end-of-life option.
"It was made from Lapiz Lazuli"
Well its either blue dye or unbreaking 3, it is very valuable if you just start your world
HahahahaaahahhahahhahahahahahhahahahahahahahhahahahhahahahahAHAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHHAA
Minecraft Steve: why are you always painting🎶 why are you always painting🎶 why aren’t you enchanting🎶
This made me laugh
Ah yes, a Gamer
@Zhiyue YANG ikr
Narrator: “Pigments cost lots of money.”
People: **Puts tons of pigment in slime**
I swear ive seen some people use so much pigment you cant literally play with the slime anymore its such a waste
Professional pigments are made sometimes from very rare minerals that can be really expensive because they were over mined in the past or are really hard to find and produce at cheap costs. Mineral pigments often work better with paints than synthetic ones, but I know this from watercolor so it might be different for paints? But the pigment your probably using for slime is synthetic since a lot of mineral pigments for paints can actually be extremely toxic to touch or inhale!
Dino Dalmatian, oh! That makes sense, thank you for helping me understand! (Btw, I don't really do slime)
@@catsboots803 oh yeah sorry for being long and there is nothing wrong with using a little extra pigment for slime ;D
@@dinodalmatian4781 besides, if you use too much you can just add more slime.
Me: It's 10pm i don't have a time to watch this, i'm going to sleep.
My Brain at 2am: *ARE YOU SURE YOU DIDN'T WANT TO KNOW WHY PAINT OIL IS EXPENSIVE?!!!*
Didn't you listen? It's not the paint oil but the paint pigment that costs so much! ;)
Me rn 🤦🏾♀️ it’s 2:13am
@@djdestroyer their brain said that before they watched the video so they wouldn't have known
Sigh
So true. Like I couldn't have figured out why on my own just pausing a moment.
wished this video was longer, such beauty
This is why you don't ask an artist for free art
(there's a fight in the replies lmao)
Even if they’re using a basic pencil you still don’t do it
Amen
Bet you draw digital anime art
You cant buy time with money but you can use time to make money therefore just dont ask for free art
@@Chanhee oh shut up please thats so cringey “oh i will insult someone for no reason thats so funny and cool yes”
I never understood why my mom would beat the life out of me when I used her oil paints when I was 7. It’s because the ones I was using WHERE 200 EACH 💀
so you were good at finding them or didn't she hide it after it happend the first time?
MiSaLiAnW or she assumed the first beating was enough to teach her
I Dunno. never
MiSaLiAnW I’m a simple woman. I find it first I use the paint
How old were you at the time?
The only paint I’ve ever purchased came with my Windows 95.
good one mate
95 ????
Syed mdabdullah yikes... you don’t know
@@syedmdabdullah3052 are you a new kid
I'm the 1000th like lol
In Austin, Texas, occasionally University of Texas students will take an art class for a semester and then get tired of it. And at the end the year, when mom and dad come to pick them up, if it doesn’t fit in their vehicle, it gets tossed. I used to dumpster dive in May and find all sorts of treasures, including full tubes of pigmented paints.
I think I need to show this to all the people who ask me for free art
Helo ken I get Fri art?
Helo ken I get Fri art?
Helo ken I get Fri art?
Helo ken I get Fri art?
Helo ken I get Fri art?
When he said ‘Labiz Lazuli’ my brain went straight to Minecraft...
It's Lapis lazuli
Its also where you get blue pigment in Minecraft. The only difference is that its waaaaay more common in game.
I went straight to Steven universe.
@@woob9287 I wento to "Houseki no Kuni / Land of the Lustrous" :)
*STEVEN UNIVERSE*
My brain: I wanna eat this
Me: What?
My brain: I wanna eat this
I relate
You meant you not your brain because you are nothing without your brain
My brain: Like that comment
Me: But..
My brain: I SAID LIKE IT!!!!!!!
Yummy mummies?
LSD-Rick B-172 r/wooosh
Cadmium colors are super expensive, too. I wish they had shared that process. Great video!
"Ultra Marine was made out of Lapis Lazuli"
Me: This prooves minecraft wasnt foolin around when blue dye came from lapis😏😏😏
I was thinking the same hahah
So in real life,diamonds or lapiz lazuli is rarer?
@@gillianabigail918 p e r h a p s
(It always was?)
@@gillianabigail918 Diamonds of course.
Finally a use
"Oil paint is a mixture of oil and paint."
_fire is hot and the sky is blue_
Pigment. Listen carefully.
@@rumblefish9 r/whoosh
Thanks for typing fire is hot I was worried it was cold for a minute
The amount of times I see the same comment. So original. 🤦♀️
@@rumblefish9 r/woOOsHh
that ultra marine lives up to its name ... never seen such a beautiful shade of blue on paintings
Lapis lazuli is a semi precious gemstone, and high quality lapis can cost also, no wonder it costs alot
Fun story. I bought a cool ring second hand. Big stone. Too small for me but I liked the blue. Turned out to be Lapis lazuli. Had it on my dresser for about three weeks. Liked looking at it. One Sunday morning, for no real reason, felt inclined to stuff it into my pocket. A lady at church, who is a bit of an outlier, shows up wearing a scarf exactly the color and speckling of the ring. I walk up to her, "This is for you." and hand her the ring. :) That was years ago and it still makes me smile.
Back in the 1800s they made a chemical process for mass producing the molecularly identical substance as lapis gemstone from scratch, so modern ultramarine is pretty cheap. And identical/better than the old stuff (purer, no rock mixed in, etc). There's zero reason anymore to use the actual gemstone other than being a hipster.
*The reason they charge so much is so it doesn’t get mistaken for frosting.*
Bwahahahahaha!
Yohohohoho
Its expensive cuz it also used to be made with poison asweĺl
Nobody will know what this was about
Same
HAHAHAHA
I be ignoring it in caves at this point....
blue nuts
I’m still trying to find a single piece of gold
Ultra marine is basically 4k resolution on a 1080p canvas
more like a 40K resolution. *ba dum tss*
@@lefr33man lol, that took me a second to realize that was where you were actually going with it
@@lefr33man Noice.
But just look at how satisfying it was to just see the paint get cut of from the other paint like that-
Who else is not here for the info but for that satisfying luscious thick scenery of oil paint.
I want to stomp and squish it so bad
I want to eat it-
Moi
Video: **Lapis Lazuli** is worth $30,000 per kilo.
Minecraft Player: I am rich!
Mr Alťa hell yeah
Peridot: i won the mega lottery
lost in mind Ehhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
Laughs in 2 stacks of lapis lazuli blocks
@@roguemaniac7929 _laughs in _*_fortune 3_*
*Business Insider:* "Why oil paint is so expensive"
*America:* OIL!?
💀💀🤣
😂
*invades paint stores*
*knock* *knock* ITS THE UNITED STATES
As an American, I can confirm
Am i the only one who thought the paint looked like candy at the beginning and looked delicious?
“Shit how do we make brown...”
“Well the yucky skin of Mummies are brown.”
“Shit you’re right.”
“Shit how do we make brown”
“Well sometimes shit is brown”
“Oh Great timing William, I need to go to the outhouse”
Who's brill idea was that?
@@auhsojacosta1672 Hahahaha what the actual frickery man
@@wazzabigii6397 imagine paying someone to paint you, then when you die you realize your painting was made of literal shit
„Shit“ youre right
“Oil paint is a mixture of oil and paint.” 👁👄👁
Edit: Wow, how did my dumb comment get so many likes? Also I love how everyone is responding with "he said oil and pigment" I misquoted on purpose lmao
Wow I would have never guessed
Billie eielash: duh
Never knew :o
Holy cow! That’s a lot of likes!
G E N I U S
Hears the word "lapis lazuli "
My brain: *m i n e c r a f t*
Hi jhooooope
LMAOOOO
Mony. v lol same
My brain : whisper of the heart..
Steven universe
This really puts our whole world into perspective. All these beautiful pigments that people have to put this much effort to reproduce in a physical sense just straight up exists as a natural thing in the rest of our world
There's plenty of very cheap botanical based pigments too that more closely follow those you see in nature normally, but they aren't very good for oil painting because they fade over months/years. For a flower that only exist sin spring, that doesn't matter to the plant. For a painter it is a big problem. So the expensive ones have to be usually mineral based.
"They ran out of mummies to use"
So that's how Cleopatra's mummy went missing? 🤔
XxCherrydere樱桃xX heh
Haha 😂
You know, sometimes I even wonder if she was ever mummified like the rest of the pharaohs, considering the circumstances of her death.
@@bananaborz1 how did she die?
@@zee166
Suicide through venom of a snake bite or a coated needle, either way still suicide.
They use mummy to make the paint? Damn your painting gonna haunt you at night.
Whew.. I get the horror paintings now..
Hey
@@topfivetopfive1017 Hey
"OoOoOoOoo, your perspective is off and your brush strokes are hEaVyYyy, OoOoOooOOooo"
Recycling is a good thing.
any other artists mouths watering looking at all that paint?! imagine like 500 layers of that thicc impasto
Eh I'm not really an oil paint person lmao. For me, imagining that much alcohol marker ink is sooo satisfying!
Starts out a painting ends up a sculpture.
I prefer colored pencils. But oh~... imagining that much Prismacolor wax makes me wanna die
My aunt was an artist. She plied her art for over 50 years when she switched from oil painting to ceramics. She asked me over to help clean out her studio. She pointed to two closets and three old dressers all jam packed with artist supplies. That is when I inherited around five hundred tubes of oil paint. About half of them were partially used and about half never opened. They were almost all usable. She wanted to rent a dumpster her studio had that much stuff in it. Instead I rented a van. I have hardly bought any art supplies since and that was 25 years ago and I've only used maybe 5% of what she gave me so far. The only thing I really ran out of was canvas. I don't even want to imagine how much she paid for all of that. When she died 20 years ago at the age of 85 she left her ceramics equipment and supplies to my cousin.
You have the same name as my sister
Some day will purchase the biggest bottles of winsor and newton oil colours😭✨that is richness 🙇🏻♂️
Everyone: Why do I want to eat it?
Me: Because It looks like colored frosting.
Because it looks delicious
Buttercreammmmm
Frostings disgusting
plz dont be butter cream... make it whipped frosting 😋
eri person with common sense
"Wow! What materials did you use to paint this?"
"Uhh... dead Mummy's, cow urine that only ate yellow mangos, lapis, oh! And of course oil."
dont forget the poppies and snail guts!!
no, not mangos, mango leaves
Hi moa😂
America be like: that painting needs some democracy
@@yonathanrakau1783 Nah, we want the dinosaur juice, not some hippy-dippy flax seed bullshit.
is this in my recommended because of all the Bob Ross i’ve been watching,
i-
Ahhh... that might explain something for me too!!
Yes
Same
Same
Who’s that? Jk. I don’t watch him and it still can up
I use Winsor & Newton Oils for weathering model trains.
Oil paint: exists for hundreds of years
Digital art: I'm gonna end this man's whole career
Art or paint not man
xD
@@asifishan1221 it's a joke
@@UserName-fb2co i am trying to correct his mistake dude
@zenubi you are wrong
Mr nut
I wanna eat it so bad, it looks so appetizing and Idk why
Omg same😂😂
It doesn't taste good. Don't ask me how i know that
@@prithvibumia2941 how do you know that?
@@prithvibumia2941 how do you know that
Brotato Chip73 it sticks to you palate, it’s sort of like eating a butter but a butter that doesn’t melt and it tastes exactly how it smells
No one:
first painter guy: Let’s pulverize the mummies and make color pigments.
people also used to eat them (-:
Without reading the title, I just assumed this was how you make butter.
LMFAOO NO WAY
@@mrsyugi-ri9ge yes way the thumbnail really does look like butter
@@junotwithat3118 😭😭
hhhmmmm the butter tastes off
Me, somebody who will never buy, nor use oil painting:
I have to know the sacred knowledge
"I don't need sleep. I need ANSWERS!"
Lmaooo
Lol
uncle jeffree's left testie that’s my brain all the time
Me at 11pm: I need to go to sleep
Me at 2am: *I NEED TO KNOW WHY OIL PAINT IS SO EXPENSIVE*
cheeseburger with bacon ??? You are either being unoriginal, or this comment is just a huge coincidence... (No offense🙄🤗😐,just saying.)
cheeseburger with bacon Currently when I’m watching this it’s 2: 38 in the morning
LOL that's me but its 12:45. 😂
what a originality.
Coincidentally reading this at 2:11am here :)
Everytime I read these titles I read them as:
"Why Oil Paint Is So Expensive, soooo expensive!"
Lol i dont know why but I laughed out loud at your comment!
@@JustHereToHear +1 I laughed for like half a minute or so
@@JustHereToHear me too 😂
🤣😂🤣😂
T0BBi94 America buys allllllll theeeeee oilllllll
I'VE BEEN SEEING POST EVERYWHERE ABOUT FOREX TRADING AND CRYPTO CURRENCY, A LOT OF PEOPLE KEEP SAYING THINGS ABOUT THIS TRADING PLATFORMS PLEASE CAN SOMEONE LINK ME TO SOMEBODY WHO CAN PUT ME THROUGH..?
Mrs Olivera Jane okhumalo,God will
continue to give you the strength to satisfy
all your client.
Wow l'm just shock someone mentioned
expert Mrs Olivera Jane okhumalo, I thought
I'm the only one trading with her, She helped
me recover what i lost trying to trade my
self.
who's this professional, everyone is talking
about i always see her post on top comment
on every TH-cam video I watched how can i
reach her?
@@marinefernandez3166 Ohhh yeah I have her contact I have been trading with her also
@@marinefernandez3166 Give her a call, or sms direct
Every time I walk into an art store even the dust on the floor is like $10. Struggling artists man :’(
I feel ya here where I'm from I have to sell my entire circulatory for some decent watercolors
Don't know where you live or are from but check our hobby lobby. Pretty sure you can shop there online and it is more affordable than Michaels and some of the others. If you catch their sales they can be very reasonable.
Ikr
Just pick up that dust glue it on some paper call it "Modern Art" and sell it for 5.5 million 😂
Try digital.
Why do they cost so much? Just put flowers in a crafting table and you’ve got all the pigments.
Ahahah I know you have gone to a shop and see those flowers for a crispy 20 and let's me honest your not gonna find good flowers unless you get it from your neighbours garden
JFloppurs lol it’s a reference to minecraft game
JFloppurs r/wooooooosh
JFloppurs r/wooosh
guys, r/woooosh has four o’s
lmao lapis lazuli ain't that hard to get. Just use a fortune 3 pickaxe smh 🤦♂️
HAHAHA
U copied someone else’s comment
Susan stfu you idiot who can get a joke
Susan why use kid as an insult? Like jeez chill, you’re acting so childish.
khloe db Think he got inspiration from it, it isn’t exactly the same lol-
@5:06 you can keep working on a piece for years? did she say layer and scraping like actually scraping the paint away and redoing the piece all over again until it is exactly how you want it? is that actually possible 😮
You can carefully remove your work, yes.