Sleeping in the Studio w/ Drying Oil Paintings. ApproveRejectUn-ApproveSubscribeUn-Unsubscribe
Question asked 2018-05-01 00:00:05 ...
Most recent comment 2018-05-02 19:25:23
Oil Paint
Health and Safety
Dear Mitra :
I was having a discussion with an artist who often sleeps in her studio. It's a small space, without good ventilation, so she paints solvent-free. She works on two or three paintings at a time and hangs them on the walls to dry. She's fairly sure that sleeping in the studio is fine. I wonder about that ( many of us have had to "work where we live" at some point in our lives ). The only information I could find about solvent-free linseed-oil paint and aldehydes, etc., dealt with house paint.
Is sleeping in the studio - or for that matter, hanging wet paintings in the bedroom - really a safe practice, even if you don't use solvent?
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Moderator Answer
(mkinsey)
While I'm not a physician, personally I can't see any risk if the paintings genuinely are solvent-free, vegetable oil-based. Does she work very large-scale or spray-apply her paint? Or, are we talking about small, typical easel paintings?
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Moderator Answer
(brian baade)
Accepting the above criteria as being absolutely true, the
only risk that I can even fathom is that of the spontaneous ignition of rags
soaked in oxidating vegetable oils. This is easily avoided by removing any
cellulosic materials contaminated with drying oils, dousing them in water, and
disposing them away from your residence.
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Moderator Answer
(brian baade)
As has been mentioned above, we are talking about sleeping
in a room where pure (solvent free) drying oil paints are drying (eg linseed
oil paints with no added solvent by either the manufacture or by the artist).
Dispersion paints, even latex house paints offgas organic components for a
while. I would want good air flow if sleeping in a tightly sealed room with large
paintings covered in wet dispersion paints.
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