A place to discuss Encaustics, OilSticks and any thing Art
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Medium is PittingYes, it's the pits, even craters. My encaustic medium is funky. I'm not sure what I'm doing wrong. It all started when I began to use the TS400 with propane tank. I think I was getting the wax too hot? I was imagining that the propane was "spitting" onto the medium, and causing these pits. Since then, it happens on lots of different substrates, birch panel, Rodney's gorgeous panels, birch ply. The instant I brush down my medium, it is full of pits, craters, holes. It takes me about 8-10 layers to calm down these pocky marks. And sometimes I can't get them out at all. I thought maybe I was making the medium wrong? Then I tried the R and F medium, and the same thing happened. I got the same results. I'm wondering, could my pans (electric woks with teflon, or pancake griddles with teflon) be contaminating the medium? It's the worst with the Propane and the TS4000 (trigger start), better with the heat gun, and the best with the little creme brule torch. I'm at my wits ends. Does anybody have an answer to this crazy problem? My surfaces are not very beautiful, and I'm pretty crushed about it.
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Re: Medium is PittingHi Daniella,
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Laura Moriarty Director of Exhibitions & Workshops R&F Handmade Paints laura@rfpaints.com |
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Re: Medium is PittingHi, Daniella,
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Re: Medium is PittingHi D,
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Ed Angell |
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Re: Medium is PittingHi Daniella,
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Hylla Evans |
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Re: Medium is PittingThanks to all for your comments! I experimented over the past few days, with fusing at lower temperatures, with my various "guns" and torches. I also experimented with what temperature I was painting on my medium. Mama Mia, I put a thermometer in my medium bath, which I have in an electric wok and it was way up there at 263 degrees! I tried painting it on at lower and lower temps, till I got it down to 180, and the pits were less and less as the temp dropped. I guess I need to be more like Rodney, in the Zen mode, then be in such a hurry with my enthusiasm and excitement!
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Re: Medium is PittingDahlink, We know you are so hot!! 263 oy vay, you could crisp up like a crater in Hawaii. So enthusiastic! Glad the cooling effect is working, whewww..
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Eileen P. Goldenberg Sorry. You have to be registered to access this content.Sorry. You have to be registered to access this content.Sorry. You have to be registered to access this content. |
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Re: Medium is Pittingi use the lower fan setting and the dial set at 2 on my makita dual speed heat gun. i originally bought it because the small tip let me direct the heat flow more specifically to small areas. Last edited by slk (2012-09-11 22:56:11) |
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Re: Medium is PittingI see that this is an old thread but I have some ideas to offer. One common cause of pitting (or sometimes referred to as bubbles) in the wax is released water vapor from over heating the wood panel. Allowing the wax (and the wood panel) to cool after building up several layer usually alleviates this. |
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Rodney Thompson Sorry. You have to be registered to access this content. |
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Re: Medium is PittingThat is interesting Rodney as I just had 3 crater like small pits within an inch area that were different from any of the other type of holes made by overheating. I plugged them with a color from an electric pen but now I wish I could see underneath. I never use my heat gun on high heat but maybe over time the metal is corroding as you suggest. Last edited by Lin (2012-03-04 20:10:36) |
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Re: Medium is PittingYou are right Rodney, there is a black speck in the middle of the crater...! How awful. I don't think my heat gun is more than 2 or 3 years old, never used on high.But probably have used it in prolonged fuzing. It just suddenly started happening. I got it a local hardware, a Canadian brand. I will now have to buy a new gun. There are ones that start at 140F and go up by 10 degree settings. This maybe will do the trick, otherwise it is back to the heat lamp! |
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Re: Medium is PittingIt is too bad that heat guns don't come with replaceable metal heat tubes, but of course they weren't made for fusing fine encaustic art and so in all typical uses miniscule metal fragments are inconsequential. It is usually the final layers of a piece that demand perfect surfaces, so I suggest reserving your best (newest) heat gun or torch for those final fusings and minimize the level and duration of heating. Last edited by Rodney Thompson (2012-03-12 10:07:35) |
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Rodney Thompson Sorry. You have to be registered to access this content. |
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Re: Medium is PittingVery interesting... |
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Laura Moriarty Director of Exhibitions & Workshops R&F Handmade Paints laura@rfpaints.com |
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