Description
Langridge Glaze Medium is a resin rich oil medium that gives oil colours increased translucency. Perfect for the creation of optical depth and soft suffusions of colour. Used for traditional thin glazes and fine detail work. Stand Oil base ensures non-yellowing.
(Stand Oil, Damar Resin, Gum Turpentine, Cobalt Driers)
After 20-30 minutes of applying Langridge Glaze Medium the surface will set-up to a tack that grabs any succeeding brush strokes. The wet, but tacky, paint surface can be readily painted into, even quite aggressively, without moving or disturbing the areas of fresh paint underneath. This allows for a wet-in-wet technique with very controlled manipulation of paint including soft blending.
Langridge Glaze Medium has a medium oil content and, as such, is a fat medium. It should not to be used for underpainting if oil colours with no additional medium are to be applied on top.
Dries to a satin finish.
What is Glazing?
Glazing is the application of a layer of transparent paint that sits on top of existing painted areas not unlike a layer of coloured film. The transparent glaze can alter the colour of the painting beneath without obscuring the image.The damar resin content in Langridge Glaze Medium gives brilliance to these glazes and allows for extraordinary luminosity as light passes through the glaze to a traditionally white or bright base colour.
It may be easier to describe a glaze as a non-reversible (due to the oil content), non-yellowing varnish with clarity and luminosity as opposed to an oil medium with a resin addition.
Very refined modeling is achieved using glazes on top of broad underpainting which has been employed to mark out the basic form in light and shadow. For artists who wish to apply clean, bright glazes, it is recommended choosing transparent pigment based colours.
Because Langridge Glaze Medium is highly fluid it can be used for the controlled application of fine detail, however it is versatile enough to be used for broader techniques such as a watercolour style wash effects without losing richness and vibrancy. Because of the damar content broad washes using Glaze Medium have more slip than Langridge Painting Medium in application.
Reason for non-drying filmsÂ
When wanting to dilute Langridge Glaze Medium, use only mediums with a solvent content of Distillled Gum Turpentine. Do not use mediums containing petroleum distillates, including Mineral Turpentine, Low Toxic Solvent, Artists Turpentine (contains petroleum distillate), White Spirit, etc.
The artist can also dilute purely with Gum Turpentine, although Langridge recommends a maximum dilution ratio of 1 part Gum Turpentine to 3 parts Langridge Glaze Medium.
Thinning
For best results thin with Distilled Gum Turpentine. DO NOT substitute with Artists White Spirit or any petroleum distillates. The use of the latter solvents will prevent full hardening of the damar content leaving a semi-permanent tacky film.
Appearance
Langridge Glaze Medium is a pale amber colour liquid with characteristic Gum Turpentine odour.
Clean Up
Clean brushes only with Distilled Gum Turpentine.
For further washing apply a small quantity of Marseille or other pure olive oil soap and massage the bristles of the brush to release any remaining turpentine. Wash thoroughly in warm water. Leave to fully dry before using for oil colours.
Drying Times
12-24 hours to touch dry. Any airflow over the surface will evaporate the solvent more rapidly which will reduce drying times.
Full film drying 3-6 months
Classified as Dangerous Goods and cannot be shipped.