Your Cart
SLI Search Template
Related Categories: Acrylic Markers | Illustration Markers | Refillable Markers | Black Drawing Pens | Acrylic Pens | Ink Paint | Calligraphy Pen Sets | Calligraphy Sets
There were no results that contained all of the words in your query. These results contain some of the words.
-
RaphaĆ«l Kevrin Synthetic Blend Series 3675 Fan Brush #12/12Save Up to53%Off list…and nickel-plated ferrules of their original design. Key Features:* Natural and synthetic hairs * Ideal resiliency and spring* Bristle shape memory* Nickel-plated ferrules Perfect For:* Oil, alkyd, and acrylic painters* Glazing and general painting* Ease of cleaning* Mongoose brush enthusiasts Stiffness Watercolors Acrylics Oils Exceptional Performance Without Endangered Mongoose Hair! Established in 1793, RaphaĆ«l has been renowned for the impeccable quality of their artistās brushes as well as their more recent innovations. With the banning of Mongoose harvesting due to their endangered status, brush makers all over the globe have been scrambling to find an alternative to the beloved brush hair. It took years of research for RaphaĆ«l to create a brush that would replicate all the characteristics of their famed KEVRIN without using its original Mongoose composition. A blend of several natural hairs and a proprietary groundbreaking synthetic fiber enabled the creation of the perfect Mongoose substitute, called KEVRIN+. RaphaĆ«l was so satisfied it believes it to in fact be a better brush than its predecessor, while offering all the features a quality oil and acrylic brush requires. KEVRIN+ offers the same exceptional durability, precision, and elasticity of their original Mongoose brushes, with the same ideal consistency, spring, and bristle shape memory. Like the old Mongoose brushes, the new hair blend has the suppleness of a red sable with the strength of hog bristle, but with a texture and firmness somewhere in between. Brushes are easy to clean and offer excellent paint retention. KEVRIN+ still bears the elegant, long, double-dipped black lacquered handles and nickel-plated ferrules of their original design. Key Features:* Natural and synthetic hairs * Ideal resiliency and spring* Bristle shape memory* Nickel-plated ferrules Perfect For:* Oil, alkyd, and acrylic painters* Glazing and general painting* Ease of cleaning* Mongoose brush enthusiasts See More
-
Old Holland Classic Pigment Schev. Intense Black 20gSave Up to40%Off listBlack Prepare custom paints and base liquids with these pure, light-fast pigments and high quality raw materials! For the artists who prefer to create their own paints, Old Holland Classic Pigments and Raw Materials offers a carefully selected range of 98 light-fast dry pigments. Old Hollands organic, anorganic and synthetic organic pigments have outstanding color strength, clarity and intensity. Six different raw materials, from dammar resin to hide glue, allow artists and restorers to create their own base liquids. Old Holland uses these pigments to make all its paints. The pigments have an outstanding colour strength, clarity and brilliance Key Features: * Wide range of light-fast pure pigments * 98 light-fast dry pigments * Excellent color strength, clarity and brilliance * Organic pigments include Carmine, Indian Yellow and Madder Lacquer * Anorganic pigments include Umbers, Cadmiums and mineral pigments Perfect For: * Artists who prefer to create their own paints * Artists working in oils * Restoration work * Painting on canvas pigments can be divided into three groups: Group 1: Organic pigments Of natural origin, animal or vegetable (living), usually carbon compounds. Some examples: Carmine (from the Cochineal insect), Gummigutta, Gamboge (from the gum resin of the Garcinia Tree), Indian Yellow (from the urine of cows that eat mango leaves), Mummy (from the remains of Egyptian mummies), Madder Lacquer (from the root of the common Madder plant). Group 2: Anorganic pigments: Chemical compounds from chemical elements other than carbons (non-living). Some examples divided into three subgroups:Earth pigments: Ochres, Umbers, Green Earth, Caput Mortuum, Venetian Red. Mineral pigments: Malachite, Vermillion, Lapis Lazuli. Synthetic inorganic pigments (do not occur in nature but are manufactured): Prussian Blue, Ceruleum Blue, Lead White, Cadmiums. Group 3: Synthetic organic pigmentsComplex carbon compounds which do not occur in nature, but are created in the laboratory. Some examples: Phtalocyanine Blues and Greens, Quinacridones, Isoindolinones, Dioxazine, Azo Pigments. See More
Powered by
Login and Registration Form
Customer Login
Already a customer ? Sign in now for the best experience!
* indicates a required field