Oil-Based and Water-Based
Paints
The two major types of paint are termed oil-based and water-based. For
oilbased paints, linseed oil was frequently chosen because it is a drying
oil. When thinned with an organic solvent such as turpentine for easier
spreading, its drying speed was enhanced. To make the drying even faster,
drying agents such as cobalt compounds were frequently added. Because the
addition of driers was most successfully done in hot or boiling oil, boiled
linseed oil was preferable. The drying rate of linseed oil paints was relatively
rapid at first, for several days immediately after application, and paint
soon felt dry to the touch; it is important to remember, however, that linseed
oil paint continues to dry--or more precisely, to crosslink--over decades
and thus continues to a point of brittleness as the paint ages. Strong and
durable with a surface sheen, oil-based paints were mainly used for wood
trim and metal.
Whitewashes and distemper paints differed from oil paints in appearance
primarily because the vehicle was water. Waterbased paints were always flat,
having no gloss of their own. Because the paint film dried to the touch
as soon as the water evaporated, driers were not needed. Waterbase paints
were fairly strong, with the pigments well bound as in hide glue distempers,
but they did not hold up to abrasion. Wood trim, therefore, was rarely painted
with these types of paint historically, though interior plaster surfaces
were frequently coated with whitewash and calcimine. Distemper paints were
commonly used for decorative work.
Recent Changes to Paint Constituents. Until the mid-20th century, almost
all paints used in America could be divided according to the type of binder
each had. Chemists sought to improve paints, especially when the two world
wars made traditional paint components scarce and expensive. Modern paints
are far more complex chemically and physically than early paints. More ingredients
have been added to the simple threepart system of pigment, binder, and vehicle.
Fillers or extenders such as clay and chalk were put in to make oil paints
flow better and to make them cheaper as well. Mildewcides and fungicides
were prevalent and popular until their environmental hazards were seen to
outweigh their benefits. New formulations which retard the growth of the
mildew and fungi are being used. As noted, lead was eliminated after 1950.
Most recently, volatile organic solvents in oil paint and thinners have
been categorized as environmentally hazardous.
A major difference in modern paints is the change in binder from the
use of natural boiled linseed oil to an alkyd oil which is generally derived
from soybean or safflower oil. Use of synthetic resins, such as acrylics
and epoxies, has become prevalent in paint manufacture in the last 30 years
or so. Acrylic resin emulsions in latex paints, with water thinners, have
also become common.