Oil Painting - Florence Italy,
oil paint wholesale
Accademia Europea Di Firenze
Oil Painting
Oil painting is the method of 
painting with pigments that bound with means of drying oil, especially linseed oil in early modern Europe. The oil, such as linseed was simmered with pine resin or even frankincense, these were 
in oil painting used as varnishes and were esteemed for their splendor and glossiness.
Other oils occasionally used 
in oil painting include poppy seed oil, walnut oil, and safflower oil. These oils give a variety of properties to the 
oil paint, such as less staining or different drying times. Certain differences are also visible in the luster of the 
paints depending on the oil.
Painters often use different types of oils in the same 
painting depending on specific pigments and desired effects. The 
paints themselves also develop a p
articular feel depending on the media. These techniques can be contemplated in the 
oil painting lessons in Florence.
Traditionally, 
painting was performed with 
paint brushes, but there are other methods, including the palette knife, the rag, and even directly from the 
paint tube. 
Oil paint remains wet longer than many other types of 
artists' materials, so a reality in many 
painter's studios is the removal of 
oil paint from the 
painting.
This can be done with a rag and some turpentine for a certain time while the 
paint is still wet, but after a while, the if the layer is hard it must be scraped. 
Oil paint dries by oxidation, not evaporation, and is usually dry to the touch in one to fifteen days
In the 
oil painting lessons in Italy, you will learn that the 
oil paint application is 'fat over lean' which means that each layer of 
paint must be oilier than the one underneath, to allow proper drying.
There are many other 
painting media that can be used 
in oil painting, including cold wax, resins, and varnishes. These additional media can help the 
painter to adjust the transparency of the 
paint, the luster of the 
paint, the density or 'body' of the 
paint, and the ability of the 
paint to hold or conceal the brushstroke.
These variables are closely related to the expressive capacity of 
oil paint and can be learned in an 
oil painting art course.
It is generally dry enough to be varnished in six months to a year. But according to 
art conservators 
an oil painting is not totally dry until it is around 70 years old.
Netherlands 
painters in the 15th century were however the first to make oil the usual 
painting medium, followed by the rest of Northern Europe and Italy.
The recognition of oil spread through Italy from the North, st
arting in Venice in the late 15th century. By 1540 the previous technique for 
painting on panel, tempera had become all but extinct, although Italians kept using fresco for 
wall paintings, which was harder in Northern weather.
But now, Italy reigns alone as the world’s top spot for 
oil painting course or 
oil painting lessons .