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| Painting with Water-Soluble Oils | 
enlarge | Author: Sean Dye Publisher: North Light Books Category: Book
List Price: $28.99 Buy New: $9.60 You Save: $19.39 (67%)
Buy New/Used from $9.60
Avg. Customer Rating:   (9 reviews) Sales Rank: 77423
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 144 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.6 x 0.7
ISBN: 1581800339 Dewey Decimal Number: 751.45 UPC: 035313316760 EAN: 9781581800333 ASIN: 1581800339
Publication Date: June 15, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description Water-soluble oil paints have arrived! This invaluable guide provides painters of all skill levels with the information they need to successfully work in this exciting new medium. They'll learn what water-soluble oil color is, its unique characteristics, and why it has generated so much enthusiasm among artists. Readers are then presented with the basic approach for working in water-soluble oils. Mini-demos illustrate each method, technique and application using brushes, knives and other tools. Completing the package is a lengthy chapter packed with step-by-step demos provided by some of the best artists working in water-soluble oils today. * This is the first book devoted solely to using water-soluble oil paints--a hot new medium * Basic step-by-step instruction makes learning easy
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| Customer Reviews: Read 4 more reviews...
  Good overview, but not a how-to book ... June 28, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have owned this book for quite some time and just recently re-read it. It does a fine job providing an overview of water soluble oils (WSO) and how they differ from regular oils. The write-ups for each include a listing of paints offered by each manufacturer and their light-fastness (i.e., longevity after sustained exposure to light). The information covered is more than enough to help you select one of them to begin painting.
I've used them in the past and am now taking a class where I'm using them and others are using traditional oils. I have to say that cleaning up with soap and water is awesome. I use the Artisan brand and have a couple of the MAX brand too. I'm going to try the other brands to see how they handle.
The write-ups by artists about WSOs, their comparison/contrast with traditional oils and the demonstration "lessons" provide for light reading. The pictures throughout give you a fine overview of what other artists do/did with these paints.
Having said all of this, though, I have to note that this isn't a strict how-to book. You'll need to look elsewhere for that. One person recommended the "Water Soluble Oils" section of a book called "The Oil Painting Book" by Bill Creevy. Another is "No Experience Required! - Water-Soluble Oils" by Mary Deutschman. From the reviews this last book sounds it is more about hands-on technique.
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Overall, I'd say buy this book to help you get a sense about this medium.
  Vey basic information May 7, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
I thought the book was helpfull in that it explained the chemical basis of water soluable oils and had a fairly thorough overview of the products on the market. I thought that the book leaned too heavily on the history of oil painting and basic information regarding supports, brushes, knives, etc. I would have liked to have seen more examples of the work of artists with the stature of Kevin McPherson and also more discussion of how these artists overcome the differences between water soluable oils and traditional oils.
  Now I know how to procede! A thorough explanation. July 16, 2006 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
"Painting with Water Soluble Oils" supplied me with what I wanted. A text by a an experienced practitioner in the medium, well-credentialed, successful, and wanting to spread the word (along with spreading the oils!) about this relatively new item. When I started painting, I was not so aware of the TOXCICITY of the paint as I was of my desire to USE the paint in a manner I found at least acceptable. Years later, the latest grimly discouraging news on greenhouse gasses, global warming, and newly-found carcinogens appear in the daily papers----and in the courts. I'm not an alarmist, but I thought "water soluble oils, hmmm, can this possibly work?". Thus, Dye's book told me all of what I needed to know. Of course there are pages on the components of the product, its development, and requisite scientific explanations. The science of safety in the home, the studio, the environment and its impact on our kids made this necessary.
Beyond that, I needed to see just how the stuff behaves on a gessoed surface. Dye has what I'd call a painterly style, almost abstract at times, but it's a loose and defiantly colorlful style, with examples chosen to teach. Hey, I'm sure he wants to sell his works, but he is a teacher by trade when he writes.
Anyway, I am delighted with the comparative safety of the new medium, with the courage I gained to try many techniques, brushes, knives, etc. I also continue to maintain respect for the pigments themselves. Heck, I'm not smearing it around with my fingers. My money was well spent, and I'd recommend this book because the main purpose of the text was to "git 'er DONE." Mission accomplished, IMHO. Buy, shop, paint, enjoy, plus you can inhale during fits of creativity and still run for president.
  Well researched, but lacking September 7, 2005 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
I feel a lot of the book was redundant, too much repetiton was used -- I believe it was to fluff up the page count. I'm new to oil painting all together and was looking for a book that would teach me to paint with this medium - for example, help me understand when I would thin with water, or when with watersoluable linseed oil. I thought that the promised "step by step demonstrations" would do that. Contained in only one chapter of the book, they seem almost an afterthought, and do not go into enough depth.
There is an entire chapter devoted to "what is watersoluable oil color?" There are 20 pages -- which is far too much information -- about the properties of every watersoluable oil paint by color and manufacturer, though there are some useful demos of the various marks different brushes and knives make.
The book contains more than I want or need to know about the processes by which watersoluable oils are created.
By far the lengthiest chapter is the one which showcases 14 different artists who try out this medium and provide some tips, which may be useful. But I believe its primary purpose is as a showcase for the various artists. There are some useful tips here, but much of what is said is repetition from one artist to another - and that gets boring! In some ways I am more confused than ever, having learned that some of the artists shown aren't painting soley with watersoluable oil paint - they are using the oils in combination with watercolor or acrylics or sometimes using all three together!
  Useless May 8, 2004 17 out of 20 found this review helpful
About half this book discusses unique properties of water soluble oil paints, but I learned more from reading the paint manufacturers' brochures as I did from this book. The rest of the book discusses and demonstrates various techniques, but it doesn't cover anything different than what you'd find in standard oil painting text, and there are many better ones of those. Don't bother buying this book.
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