• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
Margret E. Short Fine Arts

Margret E. Short Fine Arts

Portland, Oregon artist Margret Short - a modern day master of 17th Century Dutch art using the chiaroscuro technique to create still life and floral paintings.

  • Home
  • About
    • Margret E Short Bio
    • Resumé
    • Artist’s Statement
    • Artist Resources
    • The Lessons Series
    • Oregon Honor
  • Commission
  • Prints
  • Events
  • Galleries
  • Projects
    • Quintessential Blue
    • Iso-LACE-tion: A Thirty Day Painting Project
    • Indigenous Naturals Project
    • Lessons from the Spider Woman
    • Girl Jazz Singers
    • Lessons from the Pharaoh’s Tomb, Part 1
    • Lessons from the Pharaoh’s Tomb, Part 2
    • Lessons from the Low Countries
    • Greek Pigment Project
  • Contact
  • Blog

Testing, Testing

March 10, 2007 by Margret Short

The past two weeks have been filled with pigment tests. It is easy to see that certain colors take much longer to dry than others. I have consistently taken note of this during the actual painting process of the past many weeks. Waiting for a passage to dry sufficiently to apply the next layer can become very frustrating if prolonged.

This can happen especially in the rainy winter climate in the Northwest. Placing a wet painting near (but not on) a furnace vent will expedite things. This is a trick I employ often.

My drying chart tests were both revealing and surprising. First, Nancy made swatches of all the project colors in use thus far; 33 in all. She used a canvas pad as the surface and linseed oil as the sole medium, attempting all the while to get a uniform paint thickness.

Several pigment groups had more than one color from several different suppliers. An example of this is the yellow ochre category:

Lemon ochre (Rublev), yellow ochre extra pale Cyprus (Sinopia), yellow ochre clear France (Kremer). These colors all vary in hue and opacity slightly, ranging from a rich yellow to an an orangish or dull gold tone. The time was recorded carefully as each swatch was finished. The next step was to simply wait and test the dryness in 12 hour intervals.

It is commonly known that certain colors are excellent driers and some very slow. Umbers, siennas, ochres, generally dry quickly and blacks are notoriously slow, but my results were pretty shocking. The range of drying time in a specific hue category varied enormously.

We tested four siennas. We expected them all to dry in approximately the same amount of time. But this was not the case at all. They dried anywhere from 23, 45, 62, and 67 hours, a huge difference. We discovered similar results in the ochre and umber categories. Many other colors were found to be dry to the touch but retained a slight tack after as many as 5 days.

On to the blacks, green earths,  and specialty colors next, with final results.

Chiaroscuro Painting

Oil painting with the chiaroscuro technique illuminates the focus area with a strong light. All other areas are painted with less detail, lower values, and intensity of color giving a mysterious appearance. By putting one or two objects in the important focus area, a strong but simple composition will emerge. Combining these oil painting techniques with a selection of superior natural pigments and oil paints result in the beautiful and evocative quality known as Chiaroscuro Painting.

Footer

Sign up for Margret’s Newsletter

Join Margret while she explores imagery and pigments used since 3500 BC!

Email Address:

Recent Blogs

Doing the Mazurka with Emma Sandys

Adelaide Labille-Guiard; Folkdancing Backwards

The Queen of Capri Waltzed Backwards in Button Boots: Sophie Gengembre Anderson

Dancing the Rigaudon Backwards: Rachel Ruysch

Dancing Backwards with Elisabetta Sirani: 1638-1665

[More Blog Posts]

  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • RSS

Looking for Something Special?

© 2006 - © 2025 Margret E Short, all rights reserved