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  2. Glaze (painting technique) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glaze_(painting_technique)

    The medium, base, or vehicle is the mixture to which the dry pigment is added. Different media can increase or decrease the rate at which oil paints dry. Often, because a paint is too opaque, painters will add a medium like linseed oil or alkyd to the paint to make them more transparent and pliable for the purposes of glazing.

  3. Conservation and restoration of paintings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservation_and...

    There is solvent-based and water-based. Solvent-based acrylic paints are soluble in mineral spirits, and water-based acrylic paints are water-soluble. Acrylic paint differs from oil paint in both its quick drying time, and how the paint dries. Acrylic paint dries in as little as thirty minutes, and dries by the evaporation of the solvent or ...

  4. List of How It's Made episodes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_How_It's_Made_episodes

    Plastic bottles and jars: Mail: Eggs: Handcrafted wooden pens January 4, 2005 4-02: 41: Plastic injection moulds: Automotive oil filters: Filing cabinets: Blown glass January 11, 2005 4-03: 42: High-precision cutting tools: Stained glass: Semi-trailers: Recorders: January 18, 2005 4-04: 43: Conga drums: Metal plating: Buttons: January 25, 2005 ...

  5. Glass coloring and color marking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_coloring_and_color...

    Selenium, like manganese, can be used in small concentrations to decolorize glass, or in higher concentrations to impart a reddish color, caused by selenium nanoparticles dispersed in glass. It is a very important agent to make pink and red glass. When used together with cadmium sulfide, [9] it yields a brilliant red color known as "Selenium Ruby".

  6. Vitreous enamel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vitreous_enamel

    Enamel can be used on metal, glass, ceramics, stone, or any material that will withstand the fusing temperature. In technical terms fired enamelware is an integrated layered composite of glass and another material (or more glass). The term "enamel" is most often restricted to work on metal, which is the subject of this article.

  7. Oil painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oil_painting

    Traditional oil painting techniques often begin with the artist sketching the subject onto the canvas with charcoal or thinned paint. Oil paint is usually mixed with linseed oil, artist grade mineral spirits, or other solvents to make the paint thinner, faster or slower drying. (Because the solvents thin the oil in the paint, they can also be ...

  8. Enamelled glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enamelled_glass

    Glass is enamelled by mixing powdered glass, either already coloured (more usual) or clear glass mixed with the pigments, [1] with a binder such as gum arabic that gives a thick liquid texture allowing it to be painted with brushes. Generally the desired colours only appear when the piece is fired, adding to the artist's difficulties.

  9. Painted glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_glass

    The paint is usually not fused to the flat glass by firing, but if it is, it is still called "stained glass". Glass painting or glass painter might refer to either technique, but more usually enamelled glass. It may also refer to the cinematic technique of matte painting, which is a type of painted representation of landscape. There is benefits ...