A practical guide to solvent blending with colored pencils, including which solvents work, how to apply them safely, and when they make sense for coloring pages
Introduction
At some point, most colorists who practice blending arrive at the same question: is there a way to get even smoother transitions than a colorless blender can produce? The answer is yes, and that way involves solvents.
But solvents work very differently from the blending tools most colorists are already familiar with, and using one without understanding what it does to the paper surface can produce results that are quite different from what you expected.
This article explains what solvents are, what they are made of, how each type behaves, how to apply them correctly, and in which situations they make sense for blending techniques for colored pencils on coloring pages.
1. What Is a Solvent and What Is It Made Of?
A solvent is any liquid substance capable of dissolving another substance. In everyday life, water is the most common solvent. In the context of colored pencils, what the solvent dissolves is the binder: the material that holds the pigment together inside the pencil and keeps it fixed to the paper after application.
To understand why this matters, it helps to know a little about how colored pencils are made. The core of a colored pencil is a mixture of pigment, filler, and a binder. In wax-based pencils, that binder is primarily wax. In oil-based pencils, it is a combination of oils and resins. When you apply a colored pencil stroke to paper, the pigment is deposited into the tooth of the surface along with the binder, and it is the binder that holds everything in place.
When you introduce a solvent, it breaks down that binder temporarily, releasing the pigment and allowing it to flow and redistribute across the surface. The result looks and behaves more like a wash of ink or watercolor than a pencil stroke. Once the solvent evaporates, the pigment settles back into the paper in its new, blended position.
The three solvents most commonly used with colored pencils each have a distinct composition, which is what explains why they behave so differently from one another.
Odorless Mineral Spirits (OMS) is a petroleum-derived solvent, a refined and distilled hydrocarbon from which the aromatic compounds responsible for the strong smell of traditional mineral spirits have been removed.
The result is a low-volatility solvent that evaporates slowly and acts gently on wax and oil binders. Because it evaporates slowly, it gives you more working time before the surface sets, which makes it easier to control the blending result.
Isopropyl Alcohol is a short-chain alcohol produced through chemical synthesis or fermentation. It evaporates much faster than OMS, which makes it more aggressive in dissolving the binder.
It is the same compound found in antiseptic and hygiene products, but for artistic use it works best at higher concentrations, around 90 percent or above. The fast evaporation means less working time and a sharper, less gradual effect on the blended area.
Baby Oil, in its pure unscented form, is highly refined mineral oil, also petroleum-derived. Unlike the other two, it does not evaporate after application. It dissolves the wax binder slowly and gently by breaking down its structure through contact rather than through evaporation.
Because it stays on the surface longer, it gives the most gradual and controllable blending effect of the three, but it also leaves a light oily residue that can affect how the surface accepts additional layers afterward.
This difference in composition is what explains why each solvent produces distinct results on the same paper with the same pencil.
2. What Solvent Blending Actually Does
A colorless blender works through pressure. It pushes pigment deeper into the tooth of the paper and distributes it more evenly across the surface, softening transitions and reducing visible grain. The paper tooth remains intact throughout the process.
Solvent blending works through chemistry. Instead of moving the pigment physically, the solvent dissolves the binder that holds it in place, allowing the pigment to flow and merge almost like paint. The visual result is noticeably different from blending with a colorless blender: transitions become smoother and more uniform, and the surface takes on a quality closer to a painted wash than to a pencil drawing.
There is another important difference that affects how you plan your work. Burnishing, which uses heavy pressure to compress pigment into the tooth, closes the surface in the process, making it very difficult to add more layers afterward.
Solvent blending leaves the tooth largely open after the solvent evaporates. This means you can add additional pencil layers on top of a solvent-blended area once it is fully dry, which gives you the option to refine details, deepen shadows, or add color accents after blending.
That distinction makes solvent blending a mid-process tool as well as a finishing tool, while how burnishing compares to solvent blending comes down to whether you want the surface to remain open for further work or be sealed into a final finish.
3. The Main Solvents Used with Colored Pencils
3.1 Odorless Mineral Spirits
OMS is the most widely used solvent in colored pencil work, and for good reason. It dissolves the binder gently and evenly, produces clean and consistent transitions, and works well with both wax-based and oil-based pencils. The slow evaporation rate gives you enough time to work the blended area before it sets, which makes it forgiving for beginners to solvents.
The "odorless" label means the harshest volatile compounds have been removed, but it still requires working in a ventilated space. It is available in art supply stores under various brand names, and in hardware stores as odorless paint thinner, which is essentially the same product at a lower price.
For anyone experimenting with solvents for the first time, OMS is the recommended starting point. It is the most controllable of the three and produces the most predictable results across a range of paper types and pencil brands.
3.2 Isopropyl Alcohol
Isopropyl alcohol is more aggressive than OMS and requires more careful handling. Because it evaporates quickly, the blending effect happens fast, which gives you less time to work the area before the surface sets. The edges of a solvent-blended area treated with alcohol tend to be less gradual than those produced by OMS, which can be useful when you want a more defined boundary to a blended section, but less useful when you need a seamless, wide transition.
Its main practical advantages are accessibility and cost. Isopropyl alcohol at 90 percent concentration or above is easy to find in pharmacies and supermarkets and costs significantly less than art-grade OMS. For colorists who want to experiment with solvent blending without investing in specialty products, it is a reasonable first test.
The trade-off is that it is harder on the paper, particularly on lighter paper weights. In areas where multiple passes are needed, the repeated contact with alcohol can begin to weaken the fiber of thinner paper. Testing on a scrap piece of the same paper before applying it to the main work is especially important with isopropyl alcohol.
3.3 Baby Oil
Baby oil produces the most gradual and gentle blending effect of the three, which makes it particularly well suited to wax-based pencils. Because it does not evaporate, the dissolving action is slow and easy to control. A small amount goes a long way, and the blending result tends to be very soft, with wide, diffused transitions.
The limitation is what happens after application. Because the oil stays on the surface rather than evaporating, it leaves a light residue that changes how the paper accepts additional pigment. New layers of colored pencil can be applied on top, but they may not adhere as cleanly as they would on an untreated surface. Baby oil works best when used in a planned way, in areas where you know you want a soft, blended base and do not need extensive additional layering on top.
4. How to Apply Solvents Correctly
The application process matters as much as the choice of solvent. A few consistent habits make the difference between a clean result and an unexpected problem.
Step 1: Always test on a separate piece of the same paper first. Solvents behave differently depending on the paper type, the pencil brand, and the number of layers already applied. A quick test on a scrap piece eliminates uncertainty before you apply anything to the main work. Apply the solvent to a small colored area on the scrap piece and observe how the paper responds: whether it warps, how quickly the solvent dries, and how the pigment moves.
Step 2: Build at least two to three layers of pigment before applying any solvent. Solvent applied over a single thin layer produces a weak result because there is not enough pigment in the tooth for the solvent to redistribute. Building enough layers before applying solvent gives the solvent enough material to work with and produces a noticeably richer and more even blend.
Step 3: Use the right applicator for the area. A cotton swab works well for small areas and details, giving you enough control to stay within boundaries. A soft-bristle brush works better for larger areas, allowing smooth, even coverage without dragging or streaking. The applicator should be lightly dampened with solvent, not saturated. If the solvent is dripping from the applicator, there is too much.
Step 4: Apply with gentle, circular movements, working from the center of the area outward. Avoid pressing hard, especially on lighter paper. The goal is to let the solvent do the work rather than forcing the pigment with pressure. In areas where two colors meet and you want them to blend into each other, work from the boundary between them in both directions rather than dragging one color over the other.
Step 5: Allow the surface to dry completely before adding more layers. OMS typically takes two to five minutes to evaporate fully on most paper types. Isopropyl alcohol dries faster, often within a minute. Baby oil does not evaporate, so the waiting time before adding new layers is longer and depends on how much was applied. Running a finger lightly near the edge of the treated area without touching it directly can help you sense whether any moisture remains.
5. What Solvents Do to Different Paper Types
The paper you are working on has a significant effect on how solvents behave, and this is one of the most important things to understand before using them on a coloring page.
On medium to heavyweight drawing paper, mixed media paper, or hot press watercolor paper, solvents generally work well. The paper has enough structural integrity to handle the moisture without warping or weakening, and the tooth responds predictably to the dissolving action of the solvent. These are the surfaces that produce the best and most consistent solvent blending results.
On standard printed coloring pages, which typically use paper between 75 and 90 grams, the risk is real and worth taking seriously. The thinner fiber can weaken when exposed to solvent, particularly with repeated application or with isopropyl alcohol. Warping, surface pilling, and small tears at areas of heavier application are all possible on thin paper. If you want to use a solvent on a printed coloring page, OMS applied very sparingly with a lightly dampened cotton swab is the safest option, and testing on a spare copy of the page first is essential.
Understanding paper weight and how it handles solvents is part of choosing the right approach for each project. And how paper surface affects blending results applies to solvent blending just as much as it does to blending with pencils and dry tools.
6. When Solvent Blending Makes Sense for Coloring Pages
Solvents are a useful tool in the right context, but they are not the right choice for every situation. Having clear criteria for when to use them helps you decide quickly and confidently.
Solvent blending makes sense when the area you are working on is large enough that achieving a smooth transition with a colorless blender alone would require a very large number of layers; when the paper is heavy enough to handle the moisture without damage; and when you already have solid control over layering and pressure, because solvents amplify both good results and existing problems in the surface.
Solvent blending is a less suitable choice when the paper is thin or is a standard printed coloring page; when the area is small and detailed, where even a cotton swab is difficult to control with precision; or when you are still developing the foundational skills of layering and blending, because understanding how pressure and layering interact is what makes solvent blending predictable rather than unpredictable.
For most coloring pages printed on standard paper, a colorless blender remains the most practical and safest blending tool. Solvents become more relevant when you are working on heavier paper with more tooth, and when you want a result that goes beyond what dry blending tools can achieve.
7. Safety and Ventilation
None of the three solvents discussed here are highly dangerous in normal artistic use, but basic precautions are worth following consistently.
OMS and isopropyl alcohol are volatile, meaning they release vapors as they evaporate. Working in a ventilated room, with a window open or a fan running, keeps vapor concentration low and makes the working environment comfortable. Prolonged skin contact with either solvent can cause mild irritation, so washing hands after use is a good habit. Both should be kept away from open flames, as their vapors are flammable.
Baby oil is the safest of the three from a handling perspective. It is non-volatile, has no significant vapor release, and is gentle on skin. The main precaution with baby oil is avoiding contact with eyes and keeping it away from work surfaces where accidental spills could damage other materials.
Store all three in their original containers, away from heat and direct sunlight, and keep them out of reach of children.
Conclusion
Solvents are a genuine and effective tool for colorists who want transitions that go beyond what dry blending can achieve. OMS is the most forgiving starting point, isopropyl alcohol offers accessibility at the cost of precision, and baby oil provides the gentlest effect with the trade-off of a residual surface that accepts new layers differently.
The three habits that make the biggest difference in getting solvent blending right are: testing on the same paper before applying to the main work, building enough layers of pigment before introducing the solvent, and using a lightly dampened applicator rather than a saturated one. With those in place, the result is a noticeably smoother and more paint-like surface that still accepts additional pencil work once it is fully dry.
To see how solvent blending fits alongside layering, pressure control, burnishing, and other techniques as part of a complete approach, the guide on professional colored pencil techniques for coloring pages brings all of these elements together in one place.






















