Gesso is traditionally a mix of an animal glue binder (usually
rabbit-skin glue), chalk, and white pigment. For priming flexible
canvas, an
emulsion of gesso and
linseed oil, also called "half-chalk ground", is used. Acrylic gesso is a mixture of white pigment and some kind of filler (chalk, silica, etc.) and
acrylic resin dispersed in water. It produces a soft, flexible non-absorbent surface that is technically not
gesso (although it is commonly called that by its manufacturers). It can contain calcium carbonate (CaCO3) to increase the absorbency of the primer coat as well as
titanium dioxide or "titanium white" as a whitening agent. It is sold premixed for both
sizing and priming panels and flexible
canvas for
painting. Art supply manufacturers market canvases pre-primed with acrylic gesso. Acrylic gesso can be colored, either commercially by replacing the titanium white with another pigment, such as
carbon black, or by the artist directly, with the addition of an
acrylic paint. Acrylic gesso can be odorous, due to the presence of
ammonia or
formaldehyde, which are added in small amounts as preservatives. Acrylic gesso's non-absorbent acrylic polymer base makes it incompatible with media that require an absorbent substrate, such as egg
tempera. ''The Painter's Handbook'' notes a problem with using oil paints over an acrylic gesso ground instead of a traditional
oil ground, citing a mismatch in flexibility that over time could cause the oil paint to delaminate. == Uses ==