Linseed oil color Gysinge
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.
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Linseed oil paint
White
GysingePure 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 detailsCarbon black
GysingeAbsolute 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 detailsCarbon black grey
GysingeA cool gray color with a blue tinge, made from mainly carbon black and white pigment. Common as a carpentry paint above all during the 19th ...
View full detailsGreen Umbra
Gysinge5.0 / 5.0
2 Reviews
When you want to paint corners and moldings on wooden houses from the 18th to the 19th century, it is good to know that there was different amounts...
View full detailsGray Umbra
GysingeReady-mixed neutral gray linseed oil paint in a shade that leans neither towards green nor blue, but is more of the same color as, for example, ...
View full detailsGreengray
GysingeReady-mixed color in a dark pearl gray-green shade, common as early as the 18th century. Suitable as a woodwork paint outdoors, e.g., for window...
View full detailsGreen Soil
GysingeOxide green
GysingeClassic 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 detailsChromium oxide green
GysingePea 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 detailsDjurgårds Green
GysingeDjurgården green is a typical 19th-century color that got its name from Djurgården in Stockholm, a part of the capital that still has a lot of b...
View full detailsYouth Green
Gysinge5.0 / 5.0
1 Review
Jugend green is a color that was common both externally and internally from the 1890s until the 1930s. Externally, it is often seen on window fr...
View full detailsIron oxide yellow
GysingeNeutral, saturated yellow color. Mostly used as a tint to transform white paint into light yellow. Nearest NCS S 3060-Y20R Common as such in wal...
View full detailsManor Gold
GysingeDuring the 18th century, yellow became the color of the new manors, and it also became common on the plastered buildings of the cities. Naturall...
View full detailsGold Dockra Nature
GysingeClassic golden yellow color that has been used uninterrupted for nearly 300 years as exterior door and window paint. It has the same warmth as o...
View full detailsBrand Terra
GysingeBrown color that is rarely used in its pure form, but a classic in breaks with white. Together with white, it gives an old pink color, without l...
View full detailsUnburnt Umbra
GysingeUsual brown color with a tendency towards beige, especially during the second half of the 19th century. Mostly occurs in mixtures with white,...
View full detailsRed ocher Nature
GysingeThe use of red has deep roots in our Nordic cultural heritage from the decorative elements of the Viking Age, which later inspired the accent color...
View full detailsEnglish Red
GysingeRed-brown color. A classic from the 17th century onwards for woodwork. Very popular from the late 18th century onwards, as the color resembles m...
View full detailsIron oxide brown
GysingePure brown color. Commonly used externally as window and door paint primarily during the 1800s and 1900s. Nearest NCS S 8010-Y50R NOTE! The colo...
View full detailsYouth Beige
GysingeJugendbeige is a color that was common indoors from the 1890s to the 1930s. The color has a tendency towards ivory and can therefore easily be p...
View full detailsBlue-gray
GysingeFinished broken color in light blue-gray shade. Very common throughout the 19th century and especially during the beadboard period. The color be...
View full detailsAllmogeblå
GysingeThe favorite color of the Rococo and folk style has many names; dalablå, duvblå, gråblå. We call it allmogeblå, because it was so dominant in ...
View full detailsUltramarine blue
GysingeThe 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 detailsOutdoor primer
GysingeWhite outdoor primer for priming previously untreated wood. Mold and algae inhibiting through its content of zinc white pigment. Based on cold-pre...
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