Whilst looking in The Range for something else I found a small well palette for £1.00. I was going to use it as a regular palette but when I got home I realised it would fit nicely in a takeaway food container. So I decided to try it as part of a wet palette:
I’m pleased to say this has worked and the four test paints have not dried out overnight. To make one all you need do is:
- Take one recycled takeawy food container,
- Add a folded kitchen towel to the bottom of the container,
- Place the palette in the container,
- Soak the kitchen roll with clean water,
- Use paints as normal,
- Put the top on the container after use,
- Top up the clean water as and when required.
At the time of writing, the palettes are also available from Amazon for £0.95 with free delivery from a Hong Kong supplier. I like the pink one!
3 comments :
Link to the TMP thread.
I don't think you understand how a wet palette is supposed to work. You don't just take a dry palette (in your picture) and put it in a container with water...
Hi David
Don't believe the hype! Despite you assertion to the contrary I do understand how a "conventional" wet palette works. However, the semi-permeable papers they use are just that and nothing more. They can't be that permeable or the paint would leach through.
After over a year's experience of using the above set up I can say that putting a "dry" palette in a container with water and a sponge works just fine. It will keep paint of any consistency fluid for weeks with ease.
The most important factor is keeping the air inside the container suitably humid. The nature of the layer between the paint and the source of moisture isn't crucial.
Plus the above has the advantage you can put a mild kitchen cleaner in the base which prevents the growth of mould which you can't do with a conventional wet palette.
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