Permanent Rose Winsor and Newton Winton Oil Paint 37ml
- Winsor and Newton Winton Oil Paints are made from high-quality pigments.
- Winton Oil Paints are durable, lightfast and permanent.
- Delivering consistent colour every time, their ready-to-use formulation means you can effortlessly work at any scale.
- A high level of pigmentation provides good covering power and tinting strength.
- All of the tones have been carefully crafted to bring out the best of each pigment, ensuring bold and vibrant artwork.
- Winton Oil Paint offers excellent retention of brush and palette knife strokes.
- Winton Oil Paints are available in 55 colours.
- 37ml tubes.
Permanent Rose is a bright rose violet colour. It is a transparent quinacridone pigment and was introduced in the Winsor & Newton range in the 1950s.
Colour Number: 502
Lightfastness: Excellent
Opacity: T
Series: 1
Pigment Code: PV19
Permanence: Permanent
R135.00
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- Winsor and Newton Winton Oil Paints are made from high-quality pigments.
- Winton Oil Paints are durable, lightfast and permanent.
- Delivering consistent colour every time, their ready-to-use formulation means you can effortlessly work at any scale.
- A high level of pigmentation provides good covering power and tinting strength.
- All of the tones have been carefully crafted to bring out the best of each pigment, ensuring bold and vibrant artwork.
- Winton Oil Paint offers excellent retention of brush and palette knife strokes.
- Winton Oil Paints are available in 55 colours.
- 37ml tubes.
Permanent Rose is a bright rose violet colour. It is a transparent quinacridone pigment and was introduced in the Winsor & Newton range in the 1950s.
Colour Number: 502
Lightfastness: Excellent
Opacity: T
Series: 1
Pigment Code: PV19
Permanence: Permanent
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Made from high-quality pigments, Winton Oil Colours are durable, lightfast and permanent. Delivering consistent colour every time, their ready-to-use formulation in means you can effortlessly work at any scale. Increasing the choice and range with eight new accessible colours, your palette can be broader than ever. Explore the enhanced spectrum for yourself.
Great pigment load
Winton Oil Colour’s pigment load is higher than many artists’ ranges. Exceptional for general use and ideal for working in large volume at the highest level.
Uniform consistency
The Winton range has a more uniform consistency than Artists’ Oil Colour and is a slightly stiffer paint. It offers excellent retention of brush and palette knife strokes.
Lightfast and permanent
Wherever possible, the most permanent pigments have been selected for use with the Winton range. The formulation and manufacturing process ensure that the product will remain stable within the tube as well as offer the most permanent paint film possible.
Oil Paint FAQ’s
What is the fat over lean rule?
Oils possess the flexibility of being extended with drying oils and thinned using solvents. Unlike acrylics and watercolours that dry as their water content evaporates, oil paint undergoes a distinct drying process.
The oil, in oil paint reacts with the air, leading to solidification through a gradual process known as oxidization. Simultaneously, the solvent in the paint evaporates, a relatively quick process. However, the oxidization process is notably slow and continuous. As oil paint oxidizes, it undergoes contraction. Applying a faster-drying medium over insufficiently dried oil paint may result in cracking (if anything that dries faster is put on top of not-sufficiently-dry oil paint it is likely to crack). This clarifies why oils can be painted over acrylics but not vice versa. It also emphasizes the importance of the “fat over lean” principle in oil painting – using paint with more oil over paint with less oil, which is more diluted with solvent. This ensures a proper drying sequence, as the higher oil content extends the drying time.
Are different Brands of Oil Paint intermixable?
All brands of oil colour are intermixable.
What is the difference between Professional Oil Colour and Student Quality Oil Colour?
Professional paints pack in as much pigment into the oil as possible. Pigments are ground to a precise particle size that optimizes the visual qualities of the colour, and then milled carefully into the drying oil binder. Occasionally the pigment to oil ratio is so great that the weight of the pigment sinks to the bottom of the tube, causing the binder and pigment to separate (this can be rectified by stirring the contents of the tube with a straightened paper clip). This allows the unique characteristics of the pigments to have a greater influence on the behaviour of the paint – properties such as sheen, transparency, tinting and staining capacity. These vary from colour to colour and contribute to the dynamism that can be achieved on your canvas. Professional paints comprise a greater number of single pigment colours; colours look purer, more luminous and are easier to create vibrant mixes with.
Student quality paints have less pigment in them in order to keep production costs down, and may have added fillers to make the paints more uniform in tinting strength, viscosity and covering power. Driers are often added to slow drying pigments so that all colours dry at the same rate – the differing drying times of colours in professional and artist ranges can be a surprise for painters that have upgraded from student paints. Combinations of less expensive pigments are sometimes blended to replace the most expensive single pigment colours (these have the word ‘hue’ in their colour name). Colours may appear more chalky than Professional colours, and the choice is sometimes more limited and conventional. However, the affordability of student grade paints make them a popular choice for painters who are new to oils as well as those who need to stick to a budget.
What Mediums do I need?
Today, the market offers an extensive variety of oil paint mediums, providing you with the chance to engage with paints tailored to your specific preferences. Here’s how you can customize your paint using oil mediums…
Painting Mediums to Alter the Viscosity of Oil Paint:
Modifying your paint with a medium can vastly change the handling properties of the paint. If we consider oil paint to have a buttery consistency lying somewhere in the middle between liquid and stiff, then by adding the right painting medium you can take your paint either way, towards very fluid or very thick.
Increasing Flow:
If more control is needed over your paint, for fine detail perhaps, then a medium that reduces the viscosity of oil paint, creating a controllable amount of flow, will facilitate this. This also makes it possible to produce flat, brushless areas because the paint will level out. Glaze mediums, alkyd mediums or oils will all do this, whilst introducing their own unique characteristics such as transparency in the case of the glaze medium, a hard enamel-like surface in the case of the alkyd medium and depth of colour in the case of an oil.
Increasing Body:
In contrast, if you want to retain brush marks in the paint or a painting knife is being used and a loose, impasto approach is desired, then you will want to thicken the paint. This is usually done by mixing it with a wax or gel medium. Gel and impasto mediums are produced in a variety of densities depending on the manufacturer. Heavy gels and stiff impasto mediums will produce dramatic, sharply defined painting knife ridges, whereas softer mediums will be easier to manipulate and the edges of your marks will be rounder and a little more subtle.
Painting Mediums to Alter the Surface Finish of Oil Paint:
All painting mediums irrespective of their purpose will alter the surface finish of your painting to some degree. Oil paint contains pigment, oil, sometimes driers and more often than not a filler called blanc fixe, so anything further that we add to this combination of materials, will inevitably change the appearance of the paint once it has dried.
So if you want to alter the consistency of paint realize that you will also be changing the surface sheen of the paint at least somewhat, and if you are trying to alter the surface sheen with a medium you will also be changing the viscosity, at least somewhat. These two characteristics cannot be fully separated and go hand in hand. The most you can do is choose which you will prioritise, depending on the modification you want to achieve.
Paint can be altered to have anywhere from a matt surface finish, through a range of satin sheens, to a high gloss finish. Painting mediums containing wax will invariably produce a satin or matt finish, as wax is a matting agent. High amounts of natural resin in a medium will almost always create a high gloss finish. Synthetic resins such as an alkyd can vary from a low satin sheen to a gloss sheen.
Painting Mediums to Alter the Drying Time of Oil Paint:
The drying times of oil paint vary by manufacturer, based on the formulation that they use. In artist-grade paints, each colour also dries at its own rate, as the amount of oil and pigment differs for each pigment. The drying time of an oil paint can be adjusted considerably – shortening the drying time to just a few hours or lengthening it to several months.
Fat Mediums are Slow-Drying.
High oil content in a medium will mean a longer drying time, allowing for a longer open period with more time to manipulate the paint. These types of mediums are considered ‘fat’, so if you are painting in layers then these are best used in the middle and the final stages to add depth to colour. Over-painting fat mediums with leaner, quicker drying paint mixtures should be avoided as the fat medium will slowly expand as it cures, pulling apart the leaner layer above that has already formed a hard film, causing cracking.
Lean Mediums are Fast-Drying.
If a longer open period is not desired and a quick-drying medium is needed, driers will often be used, along with high amounts of solvents and resin and low amounts of oils. Depending on the exact ratio, the ingredients used and the application, this type of medium could be touch dry overnight.
Siccative medium is added to oil paint, drop by drop with a pipette, to increase the rate of drying.
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