Canvas, Linen, and Painting Surfaces


Blick Studio Canvas is economically priced for students and professionals. We start with a 7 oz, pre-primed 100% cotton duck canvas and add 3 coats of acid free titanium gesso. Final post primed, finished weights reach approximately 10.5 oz. This canvas is then hand stretched and stapled around solid wood stretchers. You can forget about time consuming preparation. Studio canvas is the perfect balance of high quality and economy.

Blick Premier Canvas is the highest quality canvas for the discerning professional. Premier uses a heavy duty 10 oz pre-primed 100% cotton canvas that is then double coated with acid-free titanium gesso until it reaches a final post-primed finished weight of approximately 15 oz, making it an ideal canvas for heavier paint applications. We're confident you’ll love our warp-resistant frames, which feature heavy-duty pine stretcher bars. Premier canvas features tailored corners and is hand-splined, resulting in a tight, even stretch.

Pre-Stretched Canvas
Decorative and Miniature
Traditional Profile Cotton
Deep Profile Cotton
Traditional Profile Linen
Deep Profile Linen

Linen canvas with an oil primer is the classical standard for oil paintings. An acrylic primer, less expensive than oil primer, can be used with either acrylic or oil paints. Linen is difficult to prime and stretch properly, but it offers the smoothest and stiffest painting surface, one with proven longevity.

Cotton duck canvas is much less expensive than linen, and has become the most popular support for oil and acrylic painting, especially for students. A properly prepared cotton canvas has longevity similar to linen, and is more flexible and easier to stretch properly. However, cotton is considered too flexible for very large paintings. For both oil and acrylic painting, an acrylic gesso primer is generally used.

 
Primed Linen
Primed Cotton
Unprimed Linen
Unprimed Cotton

Side stapling is the least expensive technique for securing the canvas to the stretcher bar, because it uses less canvas. Finished pieces are generally framed to hide the staples.

Back stapling is a more expensive finishing technique, and it requires more canvas, but it provides more salvage for restretching. Some artists paint on the side as well as the face, creating works that don''t require framing.

Spline finishing is the most expensive finishing technique, and some artists feel that it is not as easy to restretch the canvas as with back stapling. However, many artists choose spline finished canvas because it has a neater appearance than back staples, and is popular with their customers.

 
Videos
  • All About Masterpiece Elite Custom Built Artist Canvas
    All About Masterpiece Elite Custom Built Artist Canvas

    These exquisite custom built professional canvases are impeccably stretched upon the finest quality solid wood stretcher bars. Each canvas is hand built, individually numbered and then pre-registered with the Fine Art Registry. The canvas comes with a CD so the artist can register their completed artwork.

 

Visit our YouTube Channel: Blick Videos  to watch our full selection of videos!

  • Dick Blick Art Materials
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  • P.O. Box 1267
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  • Galesburg, IL 61402-1267
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  • Phone (800) 828-4548
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  • Fax (800) 621-8293

Dick Blick Art Materials®, Blick®, Blick Studio®, and Artists Pick Blick® are registered trademarks of Dick Blick Holdings Inc.
© Copyright 1999–2009 Dick Blick Holdings Inc. All rights reserved.

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