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Enkaustikos
Enkaustikos is an American manufacturer dedicated exclusively to encaustic supplies. While R&F is a giant of the industry, Enkaustikos is the "chemist's choice." They are famous for their Wax Snaps (a convenient form factor) and their obsession with pharmaceutical-grade purity.The Main Difference:R&F paints are known for being "oily" and soft due to a higher oil content in their pigment load. Enkaustikos paints are known for being harder, cleaner, and higher melting point. If R&F is the "oil paint" of wax, Enkaustikos is the "enamel."The Product Lines (Don't buy the wrong one)Hot Sticks (The "Crayons")Form: Square sticks that look like giant crayons.Use: You can melt them on a hot palette, but they are designed for direct drawing on a heated substrate. You can draw with them like oil pastels on hot paper.Verdict: Excellent for sketchers and loose application.Wax Snaps (The "Chocolate Bar")Form: These are scored bars of pigmented wax (like a Hershey's bar) that you can snap into small pieces.Advantage: This solves the biggest headache of encaustic painting—controlling the amount of paint. With a traditional "cake" (like R&F), you have to melt the whole block or hack at it with a knife. With Wax Snaps, you break off exactly what you need.Verdict: The best buy. The most economical and convenient way to buy wax.The "Micro-Crystalline" AdditiveEnkaustikos is one of the few brands that heavily promotes Micro-Crystalline Wax (or "Micro-Wax") as an additive.What it is: A petroleum-based wax that is much more flexible and sticky than beeswax.Why use it: If you add 20% Micro-Wax to your Beeswax mixture, it becomes flexible enough to use on paper or canvas without cracking. This is their secret weapon for mixed media artists.Technical SpecificationsBinder: U.S. pharmaceutical grade (USP) beeswax + Damar resin.Note: Their beeswax is bleached and filtered more aggressively than most brands. It is incredibly white and clean, which means their pale colors and whites are brighter than competitors that use yellow beeswax.Pigment load:Very high. Because they filter the wax so purely, there is no "honey" residue to interfere with the pigment. The colors are intensely saturated.Melting Point:Slightly higher than R&F.R&F: Melts ~175°F.Enkaustikos: Melts ~185°F.Implication: If you mix the two brands on a palette, the R&F will melt first. This is usually fine, but some artists find the different melting rates annoying when blending.Working PropertiesHardnessBecause Enkaustikos uses a very precise ratio of Damar resin, their paints cure to a harder finish than almost any other brand.The Benefit: They polish up to a higher gloss. If you want that "glass-like" shine, Enkaustikos is superior.The Drawback: They are more brittle. You must use a rigid panel.OpacityThey are famous for their transparents. Their "Transparent Red Earth" and "Transparent Golden Orange" are legendary for glazing. Because the base wax is so clear, the glazes look like stained glass.The "Slick Wax" CleanerEnkaustikos sells a soy-based cleaner called "Slick Wax."Why it matters: Cleaning wax off brushes is a nightmare. You can't use water. You shouldn't use turpentine (flammable + heat = bad).The Fix: You dip your dirty brush into the Slick Wax (soy wax), and the soy pushes the pigment out. You then wipe it clean. It is non-toxic and saves your brushes.The ArtHero VerdictBuy Enkaustikos if:You are a "color purity" perfectionist who wants the brightest whites and the clearest glazes.You hate wasting paint (the "Wax Snap" system saves you money).You want a high-gloss, glass-like finish.Stick to R&F if:You want a softer, "oil-paint" feel.You already own a ton of R&F (mixing brands is fine, but sticking to one ensures consistent melting points).Pro Tip: If you buy Enkaustikos, buy their "Hot Cakes" white. It is arguably the most opaque, covering white in the industry.

R&F Handmade Paints
R&F (R&F Handmade Paints) is an undisputed giant of the encaustic world. Based in Kingston, New York, they are the company responsible for the modern revival of encaustic painting.If you take a workshop or watch a professional tutorial, the artist is almost certainly using R&F. They define the standard for what encaustic paint should feel like. While Enkaustikos is known for hardness and purity, R&F is known for its "lusciousness"—a softer, more buttery feel that mimics the handling of oil paint.The Product Form factorThe "Cakes" (Blocks)R&F sells their paint in rectangular blocks (40ml, 104ml, and 333ml).The Pros: They are incredibly dense. One small block lasts a very long time because the pigment load is extremely high.The Cons: Unlike the "Wax Snaps" from Enkaustikos, these are solid bricks. If you only want a little bit of color, you have to chip it off with a knife or melt the edge of the block on your palette.Encaustic Stick (Pigment Sticks)Note: Do not confuse these with their "Encaustic Paints." R&F is also famous for Pigment Sticks (oil sticks). These contain linseed oil, not wax.Can you use them together? Yes. You can draw with an R&F Oil Stick on top of an encaustic painting to add gestural lines. However, you cannot use them under encaustic, or the wax will slide off.Technical SpecificationsBinder: 100% USP beeswax + Damar resin.The Mix: R&F is secretive about their exact ratio, but artists generally agree they use a slightly higher percentage of beeswax relative to resin compared to other brands. This is what gives R&F its distinctively "soft" feel.Melting Point:Approximately 175°F (79°C).Handling: This is the sweet spot. It flows easily on a low-heat palette (pancake griddle set to ~200°F). It cools slowly enough to give you a few seconds of manipulation time.Pigment Load:Extreme. This is why they are expensive. R&F mills their pigments into the wax with intense precision.The Result: When you melt a block of R&F "Cadmium Red," it is opaque and powerful. You can dilute it with 50% clear medium and it will still be vibrant. This makes the high price tag deceptively economical.Working PropertiesThe "Oil Paint" FeelR&F feels creamy. When molten, it has a viscosity similar to heavy cream. It brushes out smoothly and blends wet-in-wet on the hot palette beautifully.TranslucencyWhile they have great opaque colors, R&F excels at translucent glazes.Key Color: "Ancient Gold" is an R&F classic—a iridescent, shimmering gold that looks like aged metal when glazed over dark colors.Key Color: "Indanthrone Blue" is their famous deep, dark, transparent blue that rivals Indigo.VersatilityBecause the formula is slightly softer/waxier, R&F paints are excellent for texture. They hold brushstrokes and "peaks" well as they cool. If you want to build up a 3D surface (impasto), R&F is structurally superior to harder waxes.The Color EcosystemThe PaletteR&F offers over 100 colors. They align their color names with traditional oil paints (e.g., Alizarin Crimson, Viridian, Ultramarine Blue), making it easy for oil painters to transition.Encaustic Medium (The "Extender")R&F sells bags of "Encaustic Medium" (clear wax pellets).The Strategy: You should never paint with pure colored cakes 100% of the time—it's too expensive. You melt a puddle of Clear Medium, then dip your brush into the color cake to tint it.Tip: R&F Medium comes in "XD" (Extra Damar) version if you want a harder surface, but the standard bag is what 90% of artists use.The ArtHero VerdictBuy R&F if:You are a serious artist who wants the widest color range and the highest pigment load available.You want to learn from books/videos (almost all tutorials reference R&F color names).You want a "painterly" feel that allows for deep texture and impasto.The Warning:They are pricey. A large block can cost $30–$60.Budget Tip: Buy the "Opaque White" and "Encaustic Medium" from R&F (because quality matters for the base), but consider making your own earth tones (using dry pigments) to save money.Best Starter Set:The R&F Opaque Color Set. It gives you the foundational covering power you need. Avoid the "Translucent" sets until you understand how to layer.



