Oils & Paints
Oils and paints influence not only colour, but also vapour behaviour, feel, repairability and long-term ageing.\n\n## Subcategories\n- Linseed, tung & balsam - classic oils/resins for protection, priming and maintenance.\n- Stand oil / oil paints - durable, vapour-open paint systems (e.g. pigmented finishes).\n\nChoose a subcategory to view products, variants and application notes.
Quick answer
- Oils & Paints group products with coordinated materials and finish systems.
- Selection depends on substrate, use case, and visual target.
- Photos, dimensions, and room goals enable reliable early decisions.
- Project-specific variants can be structured without adding process complexity.
Practical context
In daily project work, these categories keep consulting, sampling, and execution aligned. This reduces handover friction between planning, manufacturing, and installation teams while improving variant comparability.
Decisions & variants
Relevant variants are defined by binder type, opacity, color family, and pre-treatment strategy. In existing buildings, compatibility with old layers is critical; in new interiors, tactile quality and maintenance goals are often decisive.
Process & planning
Recommended sequence: define use case, narrow the system, align samples, verify technical constraints, and only then finalize product selection. This sequence lowers the risk of late changes.
Cost logic
Cost logic is mainly driven by treated area, coating build-up, preparation effort, and detailing level. Extensive substrate correction and custom shades typically increase total effort.
Common mistakes & how to avoid them
Common mistakes include system selection without substrate checks, missing sample approval, and unclear work-step order. Prevention is straightforward with early clarification and documented approvals per stage.
References
- Oils & paints overview: /en/products/oils-paints/
- BEECK overview: /en/products/oils-paints/beeck/
- Consulting: /en/info/consulting/