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Your cart is empty.This listing is for one (1) brand new Gamblin Safflower Oil in a 8.5oz bottle. Gamblin Safflower Oil is lighter in color than linseed oil, non-yellowing, and slow-drying. It is an excellent medium for passages of white and other light colors, making them sparkle and pop. Safflower oil also makes an excellent solvent-free brush cleaner during painting sessions.
Taylor
Reviewed in the United States on August 3, 2024
I do a lot of oil painting and I switched over to this to clean my brushes instead of using paint thinner. It works really well and I will never go back.
R. Weaver
Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2024
great product, great price
J. Woodward
Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2024
Using this oiled to help maintain my brushes. So far, so good. Recommend!
Jeremy956
Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2024
Gamblin Safflower Oil is an essential component for oil painting. It is a safe oil medium that I use as a substitute for more toxic thinners and brush cleaners. It will mix well with other mediums and conditions your brushes making them last longer. Definitely a must have product for oil painting especially if your studio is indoors.
Davi
Reviewed in the United States on July 30, 2023
I quit oil painting for months because I was afraid of the toxicity that mineral spirits possess. At the time, I was using Gamsol. As much as I loved using Gamsol, it was toxic; sure it is odorless but there are still fumes evaporating and i paint in my own room - which was a concern. I would sleep, eat, and work in my room all while my paint is still curing from the mineral spirits that i would use to thin out the paint. Nonetheless, not only do I use this as my medium but also as my brush cleaner. It works great and I have no complaints at all!! However, unlike Gamsol which you can reuse to clean and thin (as pigment settles to the bottom), with this, the oil just turns mucky so you cant have an infinite amount of usages like with Gamsol (unless im unaware of a certain method that does that?)Overall, very happy with this purchase and i can now paint with a peace of mind that im not damaging my health in the long run!Happy painting!
John
Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2022
A YouTuber said to mix Safflower oil with Clove oil and then just dip one's brushes in the mix, rather than washing them out. I've been doing this for months and it really preserves brushes, wow, not having to wash my brushes out after each use now is a dream come true. It is true though, with a small brush, if not used for a month, it can begin to try if not reapplied.
Marie K
Reviewed in the United States on October 8, 2022
I'm no longer using turps or anything that is unsafe in the studio while painting. Now I use two glass jars of this high-quality safflower oil to clean brushes during painting. Wipe with paper towel, swish in the first jar wipe again and finally the second jar which stays clean. My brushes are in great shape too from the oil that conditions. My second time purchasing.
Elisa Han
Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2021
Given that linseed oil at a reasonable price is hard to find here, I decided to go with safflower oil. I'm trying to slowly steer away from using odorless turp/mineral spirits. My body sometimes acts up for no reason and I get headaches, pressure on my chest, and fatigue/nausea, even with ventilation.I cannot open my windows in the winter because of the frigid cold air here, and there is no heating unit in my house either, so it's me trying to stay warm in a 55 degree house. I don't want to end up in the hospital so I purchased this on a whim, and so far I really liked it. I recently ordered a couple tubes of Isaro oil paint and found that the burnt umber was leaking upon arrival and the leaked oil had become gel outside the tube. The paint was so dry it was like applying powder to my canvas, and I added just a brush tip of the oil to the paint and it was brought to life.This cleans my brushes better than baby oil, which is NOT a drying oil, so DO NOT apply paint onto your canvas right after cleaning your brush with baby oil. Your work will NEVER dry. If you need to use baby oil for budget reasons make sure you rinse it out with turp or OMS thoroughly before continuing with your painting. For additional measures have another jar of your choice of solvent nearby for an extra rinse.My only gripe is that merchants who are shipping this on their own and Amazon themselves should be careful about packing this. I received mine in the standard white padded pack with the blue logos patterned around it. It was delivered via UPS, who are infamous for throwing around their packages carelessly and somehow losing them in transit. There was zero packing material other than the oil bottle itself. I'm still surprised as to how it didn't end up leaking as it traveled from the East Coast to West.
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