Laura Boswell ARE – Printmaker

Oil and Water Mix

The difference between oil and water based inks for lino printing.

Usually I try and keep things short, sweet and not too technical. This blog breaks the rules and is more of a report to compare oil and water based inks for lino. Not your bag? No problem: I’ve seen my friend’s eyes glaze as I feverishly discuss this kind of thing with a fellow printer. Do what they do – go have a coffee and leave me to rattle on!

Up until a couple of months ago, I have always used oil based lino inks for my reduction lino printing. I’m not one to be unduly anxious about chemicals. Personally I have never had any ill effects from splashing about with white spirit and cobalt driers. I don’t actually drink or inhale the stuff and, while it’s not exactly what Estee Lauder would have recommended, my skin is fine.

St Ives in water based inks showing my painterly approach
St Ives in water based inks showing my painterly approach

Now I am having a serious flirtation with water based inks. This has to do with the long cold winter. Frankly, the attraction of shivering my way down to the studio and smashing the ice on my water bucket every morning wore very thin, very quickly and along with that, I grew deeply tired of rolling out inks so seized with the cold that they were almost impossible to handle.

Water based ink doesn’t suffer the same problems, if anything, it is disconcertingly fluid. There are a few other differences too so in the interests of anyone who hasn’t yet decided which inks are for them, here’s what I found.

I use Zerkall paper for oil based ink. It’s a good quality good-natured paper, readily available in different shades of white and an affordable choice. I found it tended to cockle with the repeated application of water based ink and even seemed to stretch a bit at times. For water based ink I now use Fabriano Rosaspina which is a much heavier weight printing paper with a soft absorbent surface and almost card-like feel. This works very well with water based ink. On my Albion press it has a slightly embossed appearance that I really like.

The Fens in oil based inks: more defined roller marks and a glossier surface (hard to show here, but trust me!)
The Fens in oil based inks: more defined roller marks and a glossier surface (hard to show here, but trust me!)

I use Intaglio’s oil based relief ink which works well for me. In going over to water, I chose Graphic Chemical inks. These are closest in texture to oil based ink and are available in large tins as well as tubes. I was also given a set of Schmincke inks to trial for the company. These inks are much more slippery and fluid than Graphic Chemical and I tend to mix both sorts which works fine (this is just me being pragmatic as I have both sorts to hand). The beauty of both these inks, as opposed to some of the other water based ones available, is that they are cleaned off with a wet rag. I have no plumbing in the studio (only my bucket in the style of Jane Eyre) so cannot be washing with soap. Nor can I risk getting the lino too wet as I always block my lino up to the right height by sticking it to MDF. Anyone who has ever seen MDF get wet will appreciate that it swells with water faster than chick lit in a hotel swimming pool.

When it comes to mixing the water based inks, I find that I need to test them on paper to get a true feel for their colour which can look different on the glass as opposed to on the print; the colour on paper often being ‘edgier’ and more attractive than the ‘pretty’ colour of the ink on glass. I also found the use of white to be very different. With oil based ink, I use white a great deal. However the water based colours tend to go chalky with overuse of white like water colours do. I find myself using extender instead to make the colours paler.

Inking up is slightly different between the two inks. I have good rollers and that’s a plus for water based ink. Oil based will be far more charitable to the slightly naff roller than the more fluid water. Applying oil based to the block is fairly easy to judge, while water based can be a bit of a struggle to get even (though this may well just be inexperience on my part). I find I sometimes have to double print a water based colour to get a good coverage. I also pause for a few moments longer with the pressure on the press to allow the water based ink a chance to absorb into the paper. I often use several different colours and paint freehand onto the lino with small rollers before printing. Oil based colours tend to catch the texture and separate quality of the individual roller marks. Water based inks blend slightly more, giving a gentler texture and more painterly effect.

Water based ink does dry much more quickly than oil (even when the oil based has cobalt drier added), but do be warned that the colour needs time to settle. I have rushed to add a layer to a print, thinking that it was dry, only to find that the print becomes a little blurry. The other problem to watch for is paper tearing. This happens, as far as I can see, when tacky ink is repressed onto the paper in the press. Do make sure you clean off all the ink if you are leaving any areas of lino in contact with the paper that are not inked for the next part of the print.

The conclusion I have drawn from all this is that both techniques have their stronger and weaker points. I adore the heavy matt finish of water based ink and the sensual way it embosses into the Rosaspina, but I appreciate the purity and the ease of oil based inks and the simple functionality of Zerkall. If my studio ever does get above five degrees Celsius again then I will probably do most printing with oils and lash out on water based for specific projects.

Author: Laura

Laura Boswell is a printmaker working exclusively with linocut and traditional Japanese woodblock printing. She has a degree in Art History/Visual Art from the University of Wales, Aberystwyth and has been elected to the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers.

15 thoughts on “Oil and Water Mix”

  1. Is the water based ink any more transparent than the oil based? Would it make a difference when mixing if the glass had a white sheet beneath it or you used a white enamel sheet?

    1. I don’t think using the white sheet would make a difference to the wet colour as opposed to the colour once on the paper for water based ink. I just have a sheet of paper to hand and smear my dipped and inky finger across it and that gives me a very good idea of the printed colour. It’s always a good idea to do that anyway so you can reference your colour against the new colour for the next layer of printing. The water based is slightly more transparent, certainly when diluted with extender.

  2. Hi Laura, I’m fairly new to lino printing, I loved it at school and am trying my hand at it again. I am using water based ink and soft lino. I am finding that when rolling the ink onto the lino that it almost then starts to disappear like water droplets on a window (that’s the best way I can use to describe it). I’ve tried inking it twice but it’s like a race against time before bringing my paper down onto the lino before I press it and it isn’t producing good results. I just wondered if you had any advice please? I wonder if I have bought cheap ink? The black I use from my Essdee starter kit seems to work but the “Ocaldo” block printing water colour ink does not. I have tried washing the lino in soapy water because it does seem shiny but this doesn’t work either. Thanks in advance. Laura

    1. Hi Laura – I don’t use soft lino myself, but it does sound like the issue may be the ink. I would suggest that you have a chat with a supplier. Shirley at Handprinted in Bognor is extremely helpful and I know that she runs workshops where they use soft lino so she’ll be well aware of any problems. I’d give her a call and have a chat. Traditional lino can be gently sanded to improve it, but doubt that would help here. http://www.handprinted.co.uk/

  3. Hi Laura, I bought one of your Registration Frames which has been a fantastic boost to my confidence as I am now printing fairly decent prints with 4 or 5 colours after years of tears and frustration.
    Yesterday as I was preparing a pale blue background, I could feel that the oil paint was really sticky and in fact it tore the paper when I tried a print. This is the first time it has happened to me and I am not sure what to do. I added a bit of Linseed oil that seemed to help but I am not sure if that is the right thing to do.
    Can you suggest anything I would really appreciate some advice.
    Erica

    1. Hi Erica – so pleased you are enjoying the printing. I can’t think why the oil based ink should become sticky like that (paper tearing I associate more with drying water based ink). However, if you were using lots of extender it might be more sticky? There is a product called ‘tack reducer’ which you can get from Intaglio Printmakers – looks like vaseline and if you add a little to the ink and mix, it loosens it for printing. Just watch you don’t add too much or the ink will just flood everywhere. Hope that helps, but if the ink is doing this regularly then I would have a word with the manufacturer or supplier

  4. Hi Laura, I use to do lino but now I have returned to my country and I don’t have the same facilities like before. I have tried to use water based inks for the first time because I don’t want to work in my place with chemicals and thing that are smells intense, but the result is really bad and way different than the ones that I used before. The oil one are more smooth and it can blend way better, and the result on the paper is way better. The water ones have “rugged surface” they are not planning well and I can’t work with more than 2 colors. I don’t understand if I am doing something wrong. I would love to hear your opinion. Thank you!!!

  5. Hi Laura, I use to do lino but now I have returned to my country and I don’t have the same facilities like before. I have tried to use water based inks for the first time because I don’t want to work in my place with chemicals and thing that are smells intense, but the result is really bad and way different than the ones that I used before. The oil one are more smooth and it can blend way better, and the result on the paper is way better. The water ones have “rugged surface” they are not planning well and I can’t work with more than 2 colors. I don’t understand if I am doing something wrong. I would love to hear your opinion. Thank you!!!

    1. Hi
      I wonder if your water based inks are not intended to be used in layers. Some water based inks are intended just for one colour printing and suppliers will often say ‘can use on top of each other’ or ‘single layer printing only’ in the product description. The other thing is the paper – paper that works well for oil, can cockle and be difficult with water based inks so you may find experimenting with a new paper could help. The other thing is that you really need a soft roller for water based inks as they tend not to pick up as easily as oil based (they are more slippery and can be very patchy on a hard roller). If your roller is a hard one, you may just not be picking up as good a consistent layer of ink as before.

  6. Hi Laura, Thanks for all the great information and your inspiring work. I was wondering if your recipe for the rice paste/nori would work for making a natural ink for lino? Thanks for your time. Cheers,
    Sincerely,
    Luke

    1. Hi Luke
      I’m not sure about that as the lino tends to be water resistant and the rice may not be great at overcoming that, but I do know someone who used to use rice and paint on their lino key blocks (the fine detail ones) with some success. Worth a try, but sand the block a bit first with some fine sandpaper

  7. Hi Laura, thanks for all this information. I am a new lino printer and am wondering about whether it is possible to print with oil based ink on top of dry water based ink (as in a reduction lino with more than one layer.) My guess is that it would not work the other way around (water on top of oil) but maybe oil on top of water (once dry) would? Thanks if you have any advice.

    1. Philippa, There should be no problem printing either way, oil on water or water on oil, so long as the bottom layer is dry. Oil based inks will take a lot longer to dry unless you use drying additives. Laura’s palette usually involves the earlier layer’s inks being mixed in with the new layer in which case you cannot mix oil and water so she never does this.

Leave a Reply to Phil Abel Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.