Saturday, December 26, 2009

Copal Fraud

The one paint supply that I absolutely could not bring on the plane was my copal medium. Copal is essential to my paintings--it gives me the ability to control the paint the way I want; it gives the paint a smooth, rich flow and a beautiful translucent quality, and it has a drying time that is just right for the speed I work at.

When I got to LA, we went to the Graphaids art supply store, which did not have my usual brand of copal. Instead I purchased a bottle of Weber Archival Copal Painting Medium, thinking it would be essentially the same thing. Wrong! I wish I had thought to read a review of it before purchasing it, but I foolishly trusted the big letters on the front of the label.



Weber's "copal" is horrible. My first clue that there might be a problem was the smell. It smelled suspiciously like turpentine, so I checked the fine print. Sure enough, the list of ingredients includes turpentine. I never use turpentine. I have difficulty tolerating the smell and I find it to be absolutely useless as a medium. However, since I had already purchased the Weber "copal" and because the label claimed that the product has all the good qualities of real copal and none of the bad, I figured I might as well try using it.

As far as I can tell, there is no difference between plain turpentine and Weber's Archival Copal Painting Medium. It made the paint watery and thin, the flow was terrible, I felt like I was almost pushing the paint across the canvas, the paint was drying up on my palette within minutes, and it seemed like I had to use three times as much paint as I would with my regular copal medium. After maybe half an hour, I gave up and went back to the house, declaring that we needed to go to a different art supply store.

This time we were more cautious. I double-checked what I normally used, then we called around to area art supply stores to find one that had it in stock. Walser's art supply had several bottles in stock, so we made a quick trip there, navigating around the holiday mall traffic. I had a nice (short) chat with the man working there about how the Weber "copal" is crap. He suggested I try Da Vinci copal, but I wasn't willing to experiment any further with my mediums right now. Maybe I'll try it when I'm back home. What I did purchase was my reliable Grumbacher's Copal Painting Medium.





This is good stuff. Maybe the Da Vinci will prove superior, but I've always been delighted with Grumbacher's copal. The smell is much nicer than turpentine, the flow is beautiful, it reduces the amount of paint I need to use, and the final colors are gorgeous.

2 comments:

Rob said...

Obviously, you have never used real copal medium...that is, made from Congo Copal that has first be boiled down, or "run", and then melted into linseed oil. As with all NATURAL resins, it can only be thinned with turpentine or Oil of Spike. Anything that can be thinned with Turpenoid, Gamsol, Grumtine or odorless mineral spirits (all just another name for K2 Kerosene) is alkyd, A synthetic that is notorious for peeling and delaminating.

All of that crap you think is copal has absolutely no resemblance to the real stuff. Besides, rather than using it like a true painting medium you're just using it to thin paint, so anything will do.

Eric said...

Dear Waterbury Girl.

Enjoyed your post about Grumbacher Copal. I like your paintings too. Please ignore "Rob"'s comment here. It's funny how people like to pick arguments and criticise people randomly, on the internet, about absolutely anything. In real life such poor comportment is not tolerated; with good reason.

Cheers

Keep painting. La belle lutte.