I don't get it. If the paints were meant to be thinner, they'd be sold at a thinner consistency. So why waist the time and paint? It's not like watering it down makes it look any better. In fact, it just makes the paint all streaky and uneven.
Stop with your stupid ironic memefaggotry, all they do is make new painters feel like they're doing something wrong.
>If the paints were meant to be thinner, they'd be sold at a thinner consistency. And then you'd get less work out of the same volume of paint. This is a pretty consistent practice with all forms of paint, from artistic uses to houses.
Alexander Miller
This is bait right? You only have to add a small amount of water to the paint. You get a smoother paint job with 2 to 3 layers of slightly thinned paint than one thick layer. Also sometimes you don't need to thin paint, such as when painting large areas or drybrushing.
Liam Ross
Adding thinner to paint activates a chemical process in the paint that actually makes it level and bond better. Paints are made with adding thinner in mind from the start.
Anthony Cox
Take your memefaggotry somewhere else, memefaggot. >"omg le thin ur paientz lelelelelelelelele" >you
Asher Phillips
Also, some companies do sell pre-thinned paint. Usually intended for airbrushing.
Juan Lopez
>such as when painting large areas
Unless by large areas you mean something like the wall of a house you typically want to still thin your paints for scale modeling. On larger areas unthinned paints tend to dry noticeably unevenly and develop brush marks pretty badly compared to a couple of layers of thinned paint.
Jaxson Nelson
>And then you'd get less work out of the same volume of paint. This is a pretty consistent practice with all forms of paint, from artistic uses to houses. You can add water to Coke so that a bottle will last longer, doesn't mean it's what you're meant to do.
>2 to 3 layers Stop wasting time. No wonder you all whine about being such slow fucking painters. Why bother with this?
>adding thinner to blah blah blah Sauce?
Connor Howard
You can add water to Coke so that a bottle will last longer, doesn't mean it's what you're meant to do.
Holy shit
Jayden Kelly
Just make sure your brush is always wet. It isn't that fucking hard.
Ryan Lopez
Nice le maymay, memetard.
Henry Baker
So, is OP trolling, retarded, or both? Takin' all bets!
A portion of all wagers will be set aside to get OP into an art class so he can be beaten over the head with a palette until he stops bein' a jackass!
Oliver Clark
What does art class have to do with using paints properly? Seriously, why sell thicker paint if it's not meant to be thick?
Gabriel Gutierrez
Sir, please refrain from trying to influence the betting.
Cooper Parker
There is no chemical reaction. Adding thinner instead of water helps improve flow and leveling because thinner mediums aren't just pure acrylic medium, they often contain things like flow aids and surfactants to improve flow and leveling ability.
Charles Rivera
Holy kek I fucked
Brandon Gonzalez
I have 5 on retarded! As a gallery painter, while unthinned paints feel better, thin is the proper path to having realistic form!
David Young
Doing the emperors work user.
Michael Parker
By thinner I meant "Whatever the hell you're adding to the paint to thin it out", not specifically acrylic thinner from a bottle. Even just thinning with water results in a better bond.
Samuel Gray
Troll from the responses half way through the thread.
Ryder Cruz
>Even just thinning with water results in a better bond.
I don't think there's a chemical difference, it's just that unthinned paint is thicker and thicker paint is easier to peel off.
Julian Gomez
Shipping costs, for starters.
Brody Jones
20 on troll. Specifically a troll that is too retarded to understand the argument between "to thin or not to thin".
Jace Wright
>You can add water to Coke so that a bottle will last longer, doesn't mean it's what you're meant to do. Paint is not a beverage.
Stop drinking paint. Your brain damage is showing.
Andrew Russell
>Adding water to cement... why? I don't get it. If cement was meant to be a paste, it would be sold as a paste. So why waist the time and cement? It's not like watering it down makes it look any better. In fact, it just makes the cement all gooey and sticky.
Stop with your stupid ironic memefaggotry, all they do is make new bricklayers feel like they're doing something wrong.
Pic related.
Samuel Morales
Neatness notwithstanding, thinning paint allows you to regulate the intensity of the layer and paint into tiny crevices by allowing the paint to flow in there.
Now the absolute faggots who tell that THOU MUST use a wet pallet should be drowned by submerging their fat faces in a wet pallet.
Christian Hall
>If the paints were meant to be thinner, they'd be sold at a thinner consistency.
:^)
Luke White
It's the Anti-Duncan! SHUN HIM! SHUN THE ANTI-DUNCAN BEFORE HIS HERESY OF 'ONE THICK LAYER AND NO POINT ON YOUR BRUSH' CAN SPREAD!
Brayden Foster
>NO POINT ON YOUR BRUSH >tfw your brush tip forms a line and not a point
Michael Wood
Mine forms an asymptote.
Nathaniel Anderson
>Stop wasting time. No wonder you all whine about being such slow fucking painters. Why bother with this?
because it creates more even coverage of pigment
it's like you've never painted a fence
both
Michael Adams
Betting a ring of dried paint from a shitty GW pot seal on retarded.
inb4 "b-b-but the gw pots are ok everyone just uses them wrong!!!1
James Allen
I've never onderstood this either, it's just a matter of not overloading your brush.
You know, aplying restaint rather than slavishly following the opinion of some people who have found a workaround that means they don't have to actually apply skill.
Also, I have found various GW paints to be too thin to start off, let alone after thinning them. It's one of the reasons (the other being the exhorbitant cost) that I have given up on them and gone over to other brands.