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Kama Gum Arbaic Solution - 60ml

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$6.75 CAD
Regular price
$6.75 CAD
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$6.75 CAD
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Gum Arabic is certainly the oldest and best known of all the gums. The Egyptians knew as the kami and allegedly used it by the third dynasty (2650 BC.) To ensure the cohesion of the bandages of mummies.

Chemically, gum Arabic is a solidified descending sap exudate produced naturally or as a result of an incision on the trunk at the foot of trees of the acacia family. It is harvested mainly in Saharan Africa.

Chemically, gum Arabic is an highly ramified acid polysaccharide often found in the form of potassium salts or of mixtures of magnesium and calcium. Gum Arabic is commercially sold as a powder or unmilled crystals more or less round with colors ranging from pale to brownish yellow.

Gum Arabic is tasteless, odorless and edible. It is soluble in water, insoluble in alcohol. Even at concentration of 30 to 40%, gum Arabic is still very low in viscosity. In the industry it is mainly used as emulsifier, especially for citrus oils, as a protective colloid in the emulsions and as a carrier for flavorings.

Gum Arabic is also used in the manufacture of certain incenses because of it’s binding properties, as an emulsifier in some carbonated beverages such as Coca-Cola and even in the composition of certain adhesives; smoking papers for smokers and postal stamps.

FINE-ARTS

In painting gum Arabic is the traditional binder of watercolor and gouache. It can also be used in liquid solutions as painting medium or as a constituent in the manufacture of traditional dry pastels, although gum tragacanth is primarily used. A diluted solution of gum Arabic may also be used as a fixative for dry pastel or charcoal.

In lithography, the hydrophilic properties of gum Arabic help create and maintain a water film on the non-inked portions of the lithographic stone (water pushes the fat).

In photography, gum Arabic is also used in the gum dichromate process and for certain retouches and alterations.

USE

Mix Kama's gum Arabic solution directly with dry pigments to prepare your own watercolours. The proportion of solution to use as a binder will vary depending on the pigments and desired finish, the more gum Arabic solution you use; the shinier the watercolor will be when dried.

As a starting point, you can start by incorporating the solution at about 40% of the pigment volume and adjust thereafter. If your pigments do not mix easily, if they tend to float on the surface of the solution, or if they are organic pigments, you will first need to wet them with isopropyl alcohol or a mixture of alcohol-water to create a paste that can then be mixed into solution. You can also add to the mixture the traditional additives of the watercolor technique according to your preferences: glycerin, honey, ox gall, etc.

Aqua-dispersion pigments can also be used to replace dry pigments; however, in this case, the watercolor will be more liquid.

Kama's solution already contains a preservative, so it is not necessary to add one, however we, for optimal results, we advise you to use distilled water.

TECHNICAL INFORMATION

  • CAS: 9000-01-5
  • EINECS: 232-519-5

CHEMICAL PROPERTIES

  • Density: 1.35 g/cm3