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Oil Painting Techniques and Terms

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Learn about the different techniques or methods used in oil painting.

Alla Prima/Direct Painting

Painting not done in layers (which is the traditional way); literally "at once" in Italian

Body Color

Adding white to the colors in the painting

Broken Color

Painting small, disjoint areas of color, as in Impressionism or Pointillism

Brush Marks/Knife Marks

Using brushes or knives to highlight surface textures

Chiaroscuro

Depicting boldly contrasting lighting in a painting; also refers to any element of light and shade in an image

Collage

Adding other types of media or materials to the oil painting

Dabbing

Using a cloth or sponge on a painting to vary its texture

Dead Color

Using tonal ground work; using black and white

Fat Over Lean

Using "lean" oil (less oil than turpentine in the paint) paint, which dries faster, under a "fat" oil paint (pure paint) layer

Frottie

Glazing with opaque colors, or a colored glaze mixed with white; using semi-transparent glaze or film

Glaze/Glazing

Applying a transparent medium that changes the color or texture of the surface, especially to regulate tones; must be completely dried up before a new layer is applied on top of it

Grisaille

Painting entirely in monochrome gray; a type of underpainting of an oil painting

Hatching

Applying cross-hatching brush strokes

Impasto

Applying thick paint such that marks and strokes by a brush or knife are visible; for textural effects and glazes

Masking

Using adhesive material to cover an area or create boundaries for where one is currently painting

Painting to Completiong in Sections

Performing Alla Prima by section; runs the risk of a disjointed-looking painting if careless

Pulling

Absorbing a surface using a cloth or sponge to "pull" back the underlying surface color

Rubbing

Using fingers to manipulate the paint on the canvas

Scoring

Scratching a painting to reveal an underlying layer; usually done to achieve the effect of skin and hair in paintings

Scumble

Creating a broken color effect by loosely dragging the paint with a brush; different from the frottie in that it is thick but broken; usually uses a fairly dry brush

Spattering

Flicking a brush to transfer the paint on it onto the canvas

Teasing

Manipulating (wet) paint on the canvas

Three-Tone

Using light, medium, and dark tones only

Tonking

Having a sheet of paper absorb excess oil in a painting; named after British artist Henry Tonks

Toned Ground

Applying a stain over a priming (i.e., ground) before one begins to paint; commonly used colors

Using Ground

Allowing a portion of the ground to see through the finished painting

Varnish

Applying a protective film over a painting that results in either a glossy or matte surface

Verdaccio

Painting in greenish-gray colors for later layers in an oil painting; a type of underpainting; effective for creating flesh tones; popular among Renaissance artists

Washing

Thinning out thicker or purer paint layers

Wet-on-wet

Literally wet paint used alongside wet paint; produces a lighter look when the colors mix; "painting from light colors up"; leaves no time for drying up and is thus a quicker method of painting

Wet-on-dry

Literally wet paint used on already dried up paint