Acrylic Painting Supplies

Let’s cut through the noise. You don’t need 50 brushes, 10 mediums, and a shopping cart full of “must-have” gimmicks. After 20+ years of slinging acrylics in the garage, these are the 12 supplies I actually use. Nothing fancy. Nothing sponsored. Just the real tools that get the job done.

Brushes That Don’t Quit

Forget $200 “luxury” brushes. Acrylics chew through gear. These are tough, affordable, and last long enough to be worth it:

Paints That Don’t Lie

I’ve tried plenty, but Liquitex always makes the cut. Strong pigments, smooth consistency, and you can find them anywhere. Start small—primary colors, a red, a yellow, a blue, burnt sienna, and white. Build from there.

Canvases That Hold Up

Don’t overthink it. I use Blick Super Value Canvas Packs and Winsor & Newton cotton canvases—prepped, ready to go, and consistent. These hold paint and stand up to my heavy handed painting style.

Blick Super Value Canvas Packs - this is garage approved, must have acrylic canvas. I have shelves of them!
Winsor & Newton Cotton Canvas - when I get that BIG sale I may splurge for these.

Paper That Works

Sometimes I skip canvas and use Fabriano Artistico cold press watercolor paper, or Strathmore 400 Series acrylic paper. Both are durable, hold up to heavy paint, and perfect for practice or studies. Buy full sheets o Fabriano, or a pad of Strathmore, burn through it, learn fast.

Fabriano Artistico cold press watercolor paper - top choice
Strathmore 400 Series acrylic paper - solid pick, less expensive

Not Your Average Palette

I stopped using them and now prefer bland white canvas as my mixing surface. It's resourceful, exciting, and having a canvas that was used as a platter becomes a great way to start a painting.

Palette Knives

Keep a set of cheap metal knives around. I use them mostly for scooping paint out of jars, and occasionally for mixing and scraping.

Boards for Backing

Gator-foam board is light and tough. Tape down paper or lean a small canvas on it. Beats dragging around masonite.

1 Pint Plastic Cups

I have at least two at all times, and may use four if I know it will be a long session. I get them in the paint section at Home Depot.

Water

Not gel, not magic fluid, not overpriced medium. Just water. Been using it for 20+ years with heavy body paint. Works.

Pencils or Markers

For sketching out compositions, ideas and layout drawings. Any will do but I prefer 4B.

Junk Drawer Extras

Masking tape, paper towels, a spray bottle. Nothing fancy, but I use them every single session.

Final Thoughts

That’s it. No overkill, no hype—just the 12 acrylic supplies that actually live in my garage studio.

Affiliate Disclosure: Some links are affiliates, and I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend materials I use regularly, often from Blick Art Materials. Your support keeps my tutorials free and ad-free—thank you!

Next
Next

Watercolor Materials