Description
Classic green. Common color of wrought iron before the middle of the 19th century. Then came the fashion for black forging. Green is also a common window and door color, both in Sweden and on the continent throughout the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries.
Sample jars with pre-broken percentages 1%, 7%, 15%, 30%, 60%
ATTENTION! The color reproduction on the screen does not correspond 100% to reality.
The course of the painting
Priming: Prime with the paint thinned with about 10% turpentine. Outdoors, special primer, called zinc white primer, is required for light colors.
Intermediate coat: Intermediate coat with the paint thinned with 5% turpentine.
The final coat is applied with undiluted paint. If you want to avoid gloss in the paint, you can also thin the final coating with about 5% turpentine.
Suitable painting weather: Paint in temperatures above 10 degrees Celsius. At lower temperatures the paint dries slowly and easily becomes too thick. The moisture content of the wood should be below 15%. Do not paint in direct sunlight.
Drying time: Dries indoors after one day, overpaintable after two. Dries outdoors after two days, can be painted over after three. If the paint has not dried within this time, it is probably too thick.
Equipment: Linseed oil paint is applied with a round, stiff and dense natural bristle brush. The paint is “smoothed” with a flat paintbrush. Do not roll. Do not spray.
Brush washing: Wash in turpentine, then in linseed oil soap and water. Save on washing by storing used brushes in raw linseed oil instead.
Storage: Almost unlimited storage time in a well-filled jar. Place the jar upside down to prevent air from entering. Store in a cool place. Can withstand frost. Stir well, as some pigments sink and a sediment forms.
Durability: Indoors virtually unlimited, outdoors 10-20 years or longer, depending on substrate, environment etc. The paint chalks in the long run, which avoids mechanical paint removal before repainting.
Glaze: The paint can be used as a glaze on clean wooden surfaces indoors and outdoors, if diluted with 1/3 linseed oil and 1/3 turpentine. As a base, a half-oil of 50% boiled linseed oil and 50% turpentine is recommended.
Tips! Many people paint linseed oil paint too thickly and with brushes that are too thin. This causes the paint to run, wrinkle and have difficulty drying. Therefore, paint thinly and with good brushes!
ATTENTION! Rags soaked in linseed oil paint can spontaneously combust. Therefore, put them in water or burn them.
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