Bartc
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I find my overall preference is an angle shader or a dagger, the former being a variation of your flat and the latter being a versatile marriage of the angle/flat and a good round. I have tried swords thinking they would be even better for my use, but found them to be less usable than a good dagger. But to prove a point to myself, decades ago I painted a few with just a synthetic cheap crappy glue brush and found that it worked too. These are more personal preferences. You can paint with a kitchen knife, the side of a credit card, a piece of cardboard or a scraper or putty knife when you get right down to it.I size my boards with three layers of thinned medium on all sides and then gesso the side I'm painting on. When the painting is finished off I then coat the edges again with acrylic gel. Golden used to recommend GAC 200 but they recommend medium instead now.
I have submerged my panels in water and left them there and there is not a single sign of warping or deterioration. I know a lot of people thumb their noses at the archival nature of MDF because it isn't battle-tested — but the same people say that of acrylics. Using inductive reasoning I am confident they will at least outlive me.
I've seen really poorly prepared wooden boards (no sizing) last for decades. I'm sure mine will do much better than that.
MDF is not only cheap, it suits my painting. I like its thinness, zero grain smoothness and if it bends slightly after sizing, unlike wood that needs cradling, you can gently flatten in by hand. The only thing to watch is not to bang the corners since they aren't very strong (I use 3mm) — but I have yet to do this since I'm careful when handling paintings.
I'm equally as happy on hardboard. The smooth side is almost identical to MDF and I find it stays smooth after sizing so you don't really need gesso. I just dislike the rough side — and MDF seems easier to get hold of in the UK.
As to whether the natural glue in hardboard is better or worse than the formaldehyde in MDF remains to be seen — but I do not think either is of concern in the context of the next 50–100 years.
I completely agree. I block in with a flat or dagger and then do the rest with a small filbert and small round — that's pretty much it! My own gripe with brushes is decent synthetic “sable” ones are hard to come by.
As to "hardboard" and "Masonite", the latter is just a brand of the former. And I've done well with those if tempered on the smooth side from the hardware store with simply 2 coats of acrylic gesso. You go to much greater lengths than I would. I do like the flexibility of sizing possible by going the hardware store route, and it's certainly less expensive too, just more work.