Find out how to Make Acrylics Thicker



0:00 Intro
0:26 Acrylic gel vs Liquitex tremendous heavy gel
1:15 Modeling paste
1:34 Tremendous heavy gel demo portray
2:34 Utilizing gels with fluid acrylics
3:13 Thickening acrylics with joint compound
4:04 Thickening acrylics with flour
5:05 Flexibility check

Supplies used on this video. These are affiliate hyperlinks to Blick Artwork Supplies which suggests when you click on on the hyperlink and make a purchase order, I earn a fee for gratis to you.

Liquitex Gels http://shrsl.com/2bu85
Golden Gels http://shrsl.com/2bu87
Utrecht Modeling Paste http://shrsl.com/2bu8f
Liquitex Modeling Paste http://shrsl.com/2bu8m
Golden Fluid Acrylics http://shrsl.com/2bu8r
Golden Excessive Stream Acrylics http://shrsl.com/2bu8w
Liquitex Comfortable Physique Acrylics http://shrsl.com/2bu92
Liquitex Acrylic Goauche http://shrsl.com/2bu98

Discover ways to make acrylics thicker by utilizing gels, modeling paste and a few DIY options.

Timelapse bottle portray demo:

To make acrylics thicker, it’s a must to use a gel that is really thicker than the paint you are utilizing. Including common gel to heavy physique acrylics will not do a lot to make it thicker.

You will need to use thicker gels such because the tremendous heavy gel from Liquitex or the additional heavy gels from golden.

After all, when you’re utilizing fluid acrylics then you need to use common gel to thicken them up.

Flour and joint compound are low cost strategy to thicken acrylics however they don’t seem to be archival. In my testing they dried brittle and cracked simple after I bent the watercolor paper.

Acrylic mediums are rather more versatile and are much less prone to trigger cracking. Within the video, I fold a chunk of palette paper that has a layer of acrylic paint and gel medium in half. I could not get it to crack in any respect.

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24 thoughts on “Find out how to Make Acrylics Thicker”

  1. Thanks for showing the pros and cons of the video. Very helpful. With the cost of art products these days, and alternatives are welcome. Apparently one of the issues with using corn starch is it's not very archivable. Mind you, if Franz Kline insisted on using normal house paint for his artworks, I'm sure I can use corn starch. My artworks are marginally cheaper than Kline's! 🤣

  2. Could u please help me know how to make glossy acrylic modeling paste…..Just like Jeffrey's make… That paste is super buttery and very shiny..
    I want to make sculpture flowers (piped ones)… Need a shine in flowers paste

  3. How are you keeping those acrylics you've added gel to from drying on your pallet.. You mixed a lot of colors and had them sitting while you work. I keep mine damp with a spray bottle but water does thin them out.. I want to create more texture in my work so definitely going to try your gel method! Thanks in advance 🖤😊

  4. Will the heavy gel (or other method) also make the paint behave more like oil paint when scrabing with a knife?

    I really like the patchy pattern that is created when scrabing oil paint over the canvas. With the fluidity of acrylics it fills all the gaps when scrabing while removing the paint from the peaks of a rough canvas, instead of leaving some blank patches when dragging it out.

    Hope it makes sense what I am trying to achieve. Any advice is appreciated.

  5. Thank you very much for this great video Sir. And specially for the Join Compound recommendation, I was informed of this a few days ago and went out and bought a ''dufix crack-Filler powder'' that I would need to mix with water until I get the consistency that I want. I bought the powder as I do not paint often and I did not want the bucket of my ready made Stucco Filler (an alternative to Joint compound, I believe) to dry once I open the lid. So I bought the powder kind that will never dry. Did I do the right thing by buying the powder kind or should I return it and just use the ready made Stucco or Joint Compound please?

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