for purchases over SEK 2,500
For purchases over SEK 2,500
Linseed oil paint is a classic and timeless paint that has been used for centuries. It is made from natural ingredients, making it a good sustainable alternative to modern synthetic paints.
We offer high-quality linseed oil paint from Gysinge in a number of colours, which work perfectly for both outdoor and indoor use. These help maintain an old-fashioned feel on older houses and buildings in a way that modern synthetic paints cannot.
Pure white. In Gysinge's range of colors known as very resistant to algae and mold attack in combination with our outdoor base. Nearest NC...
View full detailsAbsolute jet black color, made from carbon black. Finished color for e.g. tin roofs and forging. Black is common as a solid color, but is al...
View full detailsA cold gray color with a pull towards blue, made from mainly carbon black and white pigment. Common as a carpentry paint above all during the...
View full detailsWhen you want to paint knots and linings on wooden houses from the 18th century to the 20th century, it is good to know that there was a differen...
View full detailsReady-made neutral gray linseed oil paint of a shade that neither gravitates towards green nor blue, but is more of the same color as, for ex...
View full detailsPre-broken paint in a dark pearl grey-green colour, common already in the 18th century. Suitable as carpentry paint outdoors, e.g. for window...
View full details15% Warm gray with a tendency towards green. White broken with 15% Grönjord. Nearest NCS S 3005-G80Y 30% Deep warm gray with a tendency tow...
View full detailsClassic green. Common color of forging before the middle of the 19th century. Then came the fashion with black forging. Green is also a commo...
View full detailsPea green fashion color during the second half of the 19th century. Used unbroken on garden furniture, windows, front doors and tin roofs. N...
View full detailsDjurgårdsgrön is a typical 19th-century color that got its name from Djurgården in Stockholm, a part of the capital that just has a lot of bu...
View full detailsArt Nouveau green is a color that was common both exterior and interior from the 1890s until the 1930s. On the outside it is often seen on ...
View full detailsNeutral, saturated yellow colour. Mostly used as a break color, to turn white color into light yellow. Nearest NCS S 3060-Y20R Common as s...
View full detailsDuring the 18th century, yellow became the color of the new mansions and it also became common on the plastered buildings of the cities. Of c...
View full detailsClassic golden yellow color that has been used unbroken for nearly 300 years as an outdoor door and window color. It has the same warmth as o...
View full detailsBrown color that is rarely used 100%, but a classic in contrasts with white. Gives, together with white, an old pink colour, without drawing...
View full detailsUsual brown color with a tendency towards beige, especially during the second half of the 19th century. Mostly occurs in mixtures with white,...
View full detailsReddish brown colour. Classics from the 17th century onwards on carpentry. Very popular from the late 18th century onwards, in that the color...
View full detailsPure brown color. Common exterior as a window and door color mainly during the 19th and 20th centuries. Nearest NCS S 8010-Y50R ATTENTION!...
View full detailsJugend beige is a color that was common in interiors from the 1890s until the 1930s. The color has a pull towards ivory and can therefore eas...
View full detailsPre-broken color in light blue-grey color. Very common throughout the 19th century and above all during the Perlspont era. The color became ...
View full detailsThe favorite color of the Rococo and the common people has many names; valley blue, dove blue, gray blue. We call it commoner blue, becau...
View full detailsThe classic intense blue color that you find on doors around the Mediterranean and that has become most popular with us as a modern window an...
View full detailsWhite outdoor primer for priming previously untreated wood. Mold and algae inhibiting through its content of zinc white pigment. Based on cold-pres...
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