You've probably been here before. You buy a set of paints. Then a brush pack. Then some paper because yours keeps curling. Then a few extras because they looked useful. And somehow — after all that spending — painting still feels harder than it should.
The problem is almost never the individual products. It's that art supplies reward system thinking, not impulse buying. And almost nothing in the shopping experience teaches you how to think in systems.
This guide is a different kind of resource. Not a ranked list. Not a beginner kit rundown. A genuine field guide to how art supplies actually work — what decisions matter most, what you can safely skip, and how to build a setup that gets easier the longer you use it.
⚡ Quick Answer — Art Supplies: What Actually Matters
Art supplies work as a system of four layers: medium, surface, tools, and format. The most common mistake is buying products without checking compatibility between layers. In watercolor, paper is as important as the paint. The Paul Rubens 52-color travel set ($30.00) closes the loop fastest for a complete starting setup.
The Problem With How Art Supplies Are Usually Sold
Here's the thing: the art supply industry has two dominant selling modes, and both quietly work against you.
The first is the giant bundle approach. Big box. Long list of contents. An impressive number on the label. The bet is that visual abundance feels like value. For a buyer who doesn't know better, it often works.
The second is the beginner kit approach. Short list, low price, presented as "everything you need." The bet is accessibility — but it usually underpromises on what a working setup actually requires.
Neither mode asks the more useful question: do these pieces work well as a system?
✖ The Random Cart
- Large brush set because it had 20 pieces
- Cheap paper because it was on sale
- Paints because the colors looked nice
- No logic connecting any of it
- Result: frustrating first session, long storage life
✔ The Working Loop
- One medium chosen and committed to
- Paper that supports that specific medium
- Minimal tools, all compatible
- Format that makes it easy to start again
- Result: sessions that build on each other
Want to know the best part? The working loop is often cheaper than the random cart. It just requires a different starting question — "What needs to work together?" — instead of "What looks like a good deal?"
The Four-Layer Framework Every Useful Setup Has
Every art supply decision fits into one of four layers. When these layers align, the setup feels natural. When they're mismatched, even expensive materials feel like obstacles.
Here's where it gets interesting: most disappointment with art supplies traces back to layer two. Someone buys good paint, then uses paper so thin that the paint can't behave the way it should. The paint gets blamed — but the problem was always the surface.
Let me walk through each layer in detail — and show where most setups go wrong.
Medium First: A Practical Comparison of Your Options
The "art supplies" category covers dozens of media. Most guides list them without helping you choose. Here's a more useful comparison — what each medium actually demands, and what kind of artist it rewards.
But here's what nobody tells you: the medium you'll stick with is not the most prestigious one. It's the one that fits your actual life — your workspace, your schedule, and how much setup you'll tolerate before starting.
Watercolor dominates compact setups because it requires almost no cleanup, travels well, and rewards repeated short sessions. Oil pastels are the right call if you want color without any water management at all. Both are legitimate first choices — both are covered below.
Paper: The Layer Most People Get Badly Wrong
In watercolor, paper is not background. It is part of the medium itself.
The difference between cheap paper and proper watercolor paper is not subtle. Cheap paper absorbs water unevenly, buckles immediately under wet paint, and fights every technique you're trying to learn. Good paper — specifically 100% cotton at 140lb/300gsm — holds water without deforming, allows clean washes, and reveals what the paint actually can do.
Here's the thing: most frustrating watercolor sessions are not about technique. They're about paper that couldn't support the technique.
Holds water without buckling. Clean washes, smooth rework, accurate pigment behavior. This is where results start looking like the tutorials you're following.
Noticeably better than student paper. Good stability and reasonable handling. The $8.99 entry point for a visible improvement in watercolor results.
Buckles under wet paint. Absorbs unevenly. Limits every technique you're trying to learn. The paint gets blamed — but the paper is the problem.
Building a Watercolor Setup That Holds Together
Watercolor is the most portable serious art medium available. A compact kit fits in a bag. Cleanup takes thirty seconds. You can pick it up for 20 minutes or 3 hours — and both sessions are worth opening the case for.
But watercolor is also the medium most often let down by its supporting materials. Here are the two setups worth building — and what makes each one work.
When Oil Pastels Are the Better Choice
Not every artist wants a water-based medium. And not every workspace supports one.
Oil pastels are the right call when you want rich, immediate color with zero setup. No water cup. No cleanup. No waiting for anything to dry. You open the set, you work with your hands, you put it away.
But here's what nobody tells you: the quality gap in oil pastels is even wider than in watercolor. Cheap student pastels are stiff, waxy, and resistant to blending — the exact opposite of what makes them enjoyable to work with. The Paul Rubens formula is ultra-soft by design: heavy pigment, creamy texture, and responsive to finger pressure without any solvent needed.
Tools: What You Actually Need vs. What Gets Sold
This is where most art supply budgets go sideways. Tools are the most heavily marketed category — and the one where extra purchases add the least value.
Want to know the best part? A single high-quality round brush does more useful work than a 20-piece brush set full of specialty shapes you'll use once. The same logic applies to palettes, water cups, and storage accessories.
✔ Tools Worth Having
- 1–2 quality brushes (one round, one flat)
- A palette with wells — or the case lid if included
- A water container with two sections (mixing/rinsing)
- Masking tape for holding paper flat while wet
✖ Tools That Create Clutter
- 20-piece brush sets at low price points
- Fan brushes, mop brushes, specialty shapes you can't name a use for
- Accessories that duplicate what your kit already includes
- Extra palettes before you've filled the first one
Buying Art Supplies as a Gift: A Practical Guide
Gift buying for artists has one reliable trap: the impulse toward visual generosity rather than actual usefulness. A large bundle looks like a lot. A well-chosen smaller setup with proper paper and compatible tools is almost always better.
The reason? Simple. The experience of using art supplies matters more than the impression they make in the box.
Gift for a new artist
Someone starting fresh who wants everything in one coherent box.
Recommend: 52-color travel watercolor set + 100% cotton journal
Gift for a returning artist
Someone who has painted before and wants to improve results.
Recommend: 24-color artist-grade metal box + 100% cotton journal
Gift for a color-forward artist
Someone drawn to rich color work over watercolor transparency.
Recommend: Paul Rubens soft oil pastel set (48 or 72 colors)
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most important art supplies to buy first?
The medium and the surface are the two most important decisions. Pick one medium — watercolor, oil pastels, or whatever fits your lifestyle — and match the paper or surface to it. Every other purchase is secondary.
What does 140lb or 300gsm mean for watercolor paper?
140lb and 300gsm are the same measurement in different units — they describe the paper's weight. At this weight, paper holds water without buckling. Below 90lb, wet paint deforms the paper immediately and limits every technique you try.
Is a larger art supply bundle better than a smaller set?
Not automatically. A large bundle is better only when all the parts are compatible and high enough quality to be useful. A smaller, well-matched setup consistently produces better results than an oversized bundle with weak paper and filler accessories.
Can I use the same supplies for both watercolor and oil pastels?
Paper is the main difference. Watercolor requires heavier, absorbent paper at 140lb/300gsm. Oil pastels work on almost any paper with some texture (tooth). Brushes are not needed for oil pastels at all — they blend with your fingers.
How many watercolor colors do I actually need?
Most working artists mix from 12–24 core colors and rarely use every pan in a large set. A 52-color travel set is useful when you want to skip mixing and paint quickly. A 24-color artist-grade set is better when you want to practice deliberate color mixing from a smaller range.
What is cold-press watercolor paper?
Cold-press paper has a medium texture produced by pressing through cold rollers during manufacturing. It has a slight tooth — more texture than hot-press (smooth) but less than rough. Most watercolorists use cold-press as their standard because it handles both wet wash and dry brush work well.
TL;DR — Art Supplies Field Guide
- Art supplies work as a four-layer system — medium, surface, tools, and format must align for a setup that actually improves your work.
- Paper is the most underestimated purchase — in watercolor, 100% cotton at 140lb/300gsm changes results more than upgrading paint brands.
- The Paul Rubens 52-color travel set ($30.00) is the lowest-friction complete starting point for watercolor, covering paint, tools, and portability in one purchase.
- The Paul Rubens 100% cotton journal ($15.99) is the single best individual upgrade for anyone using watercolor seriously.
- Oil pastels require zero setup — no water, no brushes, no cleanup. The ultra-soft Paul Rubens formula starts at $19.99 for 48 colors.
- Fewer, better tools consistently outperform large random brush sets — 2 quality brushes are more useful than 20 mediocre ones.
- Buying multiple media too early is the most common reason setups get abandoned before they become useful.
- The best art supplies setup is the one you open again — optimize for repeat sessions, not for initial visual impressiveness.
You Jingkun writes for Paul Rubens Shop about art materials, supply strategy, and practical studio decisions. His approach is consistent: a well-built art supplies setup should reduce friction toward the next session — not generate more questions about what to buy. He has tested watercolor sets, paper grades, and oil pastel lines across student and artist categories.