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Dry and Wet Media Terms
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Dry Media
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Dry Media Graphite Colored Pencil
a crystalline form of carbon and is useful as a writing and drawing tool It has a greasy texture and is dull metallic grey in colour. a stable and permanent material but can easily be removed using an eraser. A pencil with a coloured core made from pigmented wax or similar material, rather than graphite
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Dry Media Oil Pastels Chalk Pastels
. a drawing medium in stick form from a mixture of pigments, non-drying oil, and wax binder; also called oil crayon. A chalk-like crayon made from ground pigment with a binder added. Varies in degrees of hardness; the softer the pastel the brighter the color the softer pastels are more prone to smearing.
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Wet Media
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Wet Media Tempera Acrylic
also known as egg tempera, is a permanent, fast-drying painting medium consisting of colored pigments mixed with a water-soluble binder medium A type of paint made with a synthetic resin as the medium (liquid) to bind the pigment (color), rather than natural oils such as linseed used in oil paints. It has the advantage of drying faster than oil paint and being water soluble.
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Wet Media Oil Paint Sticks Watercolor
Oil bar, or oilstick, is an art medium. Oil paint in solid form. Made by compressing wax and oil until it forms into an oil stick. Painting in pigments suspended in water and a binder such as gum arabic. Traditionally used in a light to dark manner, using the white of the paper to determine values.
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Wet Media Liquid Watercolor Ink
a concentrated liquid watercolor paint that come in 8oz bottles. Can be used full strength They are best diluted with regular water at a ratio of 1:1. The stronger the color, the less water you use. An ancient writing and drawing medium in liquid or paste form, traditionally black or brown in colour – though it can also contain coloured dyes or pigments.
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