Winkelwagen is nog leeg.
Winkelwagen is nog leeg.Productbeschrijving
Soraya 913
6 augustus 2025
Es una pintura hermosa.
abecassis magali
21 april 2025
Toujours satisfait des kits de chez SCHIPPER. Très bonne qualité de peinture et la livraison s'est déroulée parfaitement et même plus rapidement que prévue. Je recommande vivement
carole
4 april 2025
Took a while to do as several small cells, enjoyed every minute. As usual with Schipper great quality paints, lovely colours.
Muse
4 december 2024
Super Motiv, gute Farbkonsistenz, würde ich wieder kaufen. Hab circa 3 Wochen gebraucht .
HowAboutNope
5 november 2024
Let me tell you about these Schipper PBNS: THEY ARE AMAZING.I got into PBN a couple years ago and I've done about 18 now. I usually buy them directly from China for about $10 each, shipping included. Most of the ones you see on Amazon are people who do exactly this and then resell them. Doing it directly is much cheaper but they take months to arrive. I usually buy my next one right as I'm starting my current one, and this works grand.SCHIPPER is a different story altogether. There are a few German brands, including Schipper and Norris, and they are always quite a lot of money, plus they tend to cost about $20 in shipping fees. So, in total, this triptych was about $100 USD for me. I wanted to try a "nice" one to see what the difference was. I think it was worth the money, and here's why:- Schipper uses more colors than most PBN. Most of my PBNs come with about 20, but this kit had 42. This makes a HUGE difference in terms of the depth and detail of the finished painting. The skies on mine look NICE instead of BLOBBY because there are more colors in the sunset gradients. It really matters.- Schipper's paint is better quality. Many of the PBN I get become gummy near the end. You can add a drop of water or some paint retarder to them to combat this, but it can be a race to the finish sometimes. But the Schipper paints I got were smooth as silk from start to finish. They also came in better pots, and LARGER quantities than I usually receive with a PBN.- The paintings come on cardboard squares. I usually work on unframed canvas and then stretch any that I like when I finish. I'm ambivalent about the cardboard. It wasn't any harder or easier to work on. I guess if anything it was smoother, which can help. But if you get canvas ones you can gesso them first to make them smooth, too. I would say that I would like to frame this Schipper one eventually and it's been hard to find square frames this size. (But very easy to find frames in the size the canvas PBNs usually come in.) Schipper does sell a frame set for this but of course, it's also a lot of money and has a high shipping price to the US.- Schipper was really good with how they labeled the areas in the painting. On three large paintings, I didn't find a single hard number to read or empty shape. The numbers were even rotated sideways to fit better where necessary - a small but very helpful step that cheaper manufacturers don't bother with.Overall, I think Schipper is good value for money, even though they are about 10x more expensive than other brands. I'd be happy to give them as a gift (finished or unfinished) and they feel like a special treat among my cheaper projects. I'd buy them again.Some general PBN tips:- Paint the background first, then objects in the foreground.- Buy your own brushes. You can get a set for like $8 and they're much better than any in the PBN box, including Schipper's).- If you have light sections and the paint isn't covering the number, try getting a white gelly roll pen and coloring over the number before filling in the paint. This helps a lot.
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