Art Spectrum Professional Oils: the range that behaves (most days)
If you want oil paint that feels “normal” in the best sense, Art Spectrum Professional Oils are hard to fault. They’re not trying to be a quirky boutique paste that fights your brush. They’re built to do the job: solid pigment, consistent handling, and a surface feel that stays cooperative when you push into glazing, scumbling, or direct alla prima.
One-line truth: they’re dependable without being boring.
The feel: buttery, yes, also annoyingly predictable
In my experience, Art Spectrum’s professional line lands in a sweet spot: not too stiff, not too loose. You can load a bristle brush and get a decisive stroke, then switch to a softer filament and feather edges without the paint turning into soup. That “buttery” description gets thrown around too much, but here it fits, smooth, even, low-grit.
Here’s the thing: that predictability is the real selling point. Mixing stays readable. Layering doesn’t suddenly go chalky on you. And you don’t spend half your session wrestling the paint film back into submission—especially if you’re working within the Art Spectrum professional oil paint range.
Now, this won’t apply to everyone, but if you’re the kind of painter who changes mediums every five minutes and expects the paint to behave the same anyway… you’ll still need to pay attention. Oils are oils.
Why this range stands out (and why some painters underrate it)
Art Spectrum isn’t loud about gimmicks. No “secret binder story” marketing theatre. The advantage is quieter: balanced pigment load and consistent dispersion across the line, which matters more than people admit.
When dispersion is consistent, a few things fall into place:
– mixtures don’t collapse into mud as quickly
– transparency feels intentional rather than random
– your value steps stay controllable across sessions
– brush drag is fairly uniform as you move around the palette
That last one reduces fatigue more than you’d expect. After a long portrait sitting, your hand notices.
Pigments: the backbone and the troublemakers
Some colors are easy to live with. Others make you plan ahead (or pay for your optimism later).
Titanium White, earths, cadmiums, your “workhorse” core
Titanium White is the standard anchor: strong coverage, strong tinting, and generally stable in mixtures. Earths (umbers, siennas, ochres) give you the quiet structure: they dry at a reasonable pace, they’re forgiving, and they don’t throw tantrums when glazed.
Cadmiums are the heavy hitters, dense, high tint strength, saturated. They also come with the familiar downsides: cost and toxicity concerns in some studios. Personally? I like cadmiums for paintings that need authority in the lights. But I don’t pretend they’re “necessary” for good color.
Ultramarine Blue: reliable, slightly gritty (in a good way)
Ultramarine tends to bring a bit of granulation and texture, especially in thicker passages. That’s not a flaw. In landscapes it can be a gift, sky passages get a subtle vibration, shadow masses don’t look airbrushed.
Alizarin Crimson: a classic… and a trap
If a range includes an alizarin-type crimson, I immediately ask: is it genuine PR83 or a modern substitute? The old romance pigment can be fugitive in many contexts. Painters keep using it because it looks right in glazes and flesh shadows.
Look, use it if you know what you’re doing. If you’re selling work or painting commission portraits meant to last, I lean toward permanent crimson alternatives.
Drying time: you can’t ignore it, and you shouldn’t
Oil painters love to talk about color. Drying behavior is the unglamorous mechanic that decides whether your technique actually works.
Some Art Spectrum colors set up faster, some stay open longer. That variability isn’t a design failure, it’s what pigments do in oil. The smart move is to treat drying like part of your palette design.
Quick notes I give students (because it saves them weeks)
– Fast driers help you stack lean layers and crisp scumbles without accidentally plowing through yesterday’s work.
– Slow driers are your friends for long blends, soft edges, and wet-into-wet corrections.
– Mediums amplify everything, including your mistakes (yes, even “just a little”).
You’ll feel it on the brush: a paint that’s starting to skin doesn’t blend, it smears. Different problem, different solution.
Layering + scumbling: where the range quietly shines
A good professional oil line shouldn’t force you into one aesthetic. Art Spectrum generally doesn’t. The paint film stays coherent enough for traditional layered methods, and it’s cooperative enough for direct painting.
Glazing works best when your lower layers are genuinely dry and your glaze pigment has the right transparency. That sounds obvious until you watch someone glaze an opaque earth into a dead patch and wonder why it won’t glow.
Scumbling is where the “even texture” matters. When a semi-opaque color drags across a toothy surface, you want broken coverage, not chalk. Art Spectrum tends to scumble cleanly if you don’t over-medium it.
One-line reminder: scumbling is a brush and paint-loading problem more than a “special technique.”
Lightfastness and permanence: labels are useful, but they’re not the whole story
Paint tubes often show lightfastness categories (commonly I / II). Great. Still, the real-world outcome depends on pigment chemistry, film thickness, binder, exposure, and what you did on top (varnish, framing, lighting).
A specific data point, because this gets hand-wavy fast: the Blue Wool Scale is a standard method used in lightfastness testing, rating materials from 1 (poor) to 8 (excellent) for resistance to fading under exposure. Source: CIE (International Commission on Illumination), documentation on Blue Wool references used in lightfastness evaluation.
That doesn’t mean your painting “lasts 8 forever.” It means you’re no longer guessing in the dark.
In practice, my permanence rules are blunt:
– If it’s a historically fugitive pigment, I treat it like a special effect, not a foundation.
– If a color will dominate a passage (big sky, large garment, major background), I want excellent lightfastness.
– For tiny accents in controlled lighting, you can sometimes take calculated risks (but don’t call them archival).
Glaze, alla prima, layered realism, pick your poison
Alla prima
Art Spectrum handles wet-into-wet with a calm steadiness. You can get crisp notes and decisive accents without the whole area turning to sludge, assuming you’re not endlessly remixing on the canvas.
I’ve seen painters ruin good alla prima work by “fixing” it for 40 minutes. That’s not the paint’s fault.
Glazing
Use transparent or semi-transparent pigments, keep the layer leaner than what’s underneath, and don’t glaze just because you’re bored. Glazing should have a job: deepen chroma, shift temperature, unify a passage, or increase depth.
Layered work
This range is comfortable in disciplined sequences: underpainting → dead layer → development → glazes and accents. Drying variability becomes an asset here, because you can schedule your next move instead of waiting around.
Mixing habits that keep the color clean (and your sanity intact)
I’m opinionated about this: most “muddy color” is workflow, not pigment quality.
A few habits that actually pay off:
– Mix in families (warm lights together, cool shadows together) so you don’t cross-contaminate every pile
– Make a small test swatch before committing to a large passage
– Keep your medium ratio consistent for a given layer, otherwise handling shifts mid-painting and you start compensating unconsciously
– Clean your brush more often than you think you need to (annoying, yes; effective, absolutely)
And if you’re glazing: use less paint than feels reasonable. You want a film, not a repaint.
So… who is this range really for?
Painters who want drama from their decisions, not from unpredictable materials.
If you like paint that feels uniform across the palette, if you build pictures with layering logic, if you care about permanence beyond “it looked good on Instagram,” Art Spectrum Professional Oils are an easy recommendation. They don’t perform miracles. They also don’t sabotage you.
That’s the deal. It’s a good one.




