French standard sizes for oil paintings
From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
French standard sizes for oil paintings refers to a series of different sized canvases for use by artists. The sizes were fixed in the 19th century. Most artists, not only French, used this standard, as it was—and still is—supported by the main suppliers of artist materials.
The main separation from size 0 (toile de 0) to size 120 (toile de 120) is divided in separate runs for faces/portraits (figure), landscapes (paysage) and marines (marine) which more or less keep the diagonal. That is, a figure 0 corresponds in height to a paysage 1 and a marine 2.[1]
Numéro | Figure (cm) | Paysage (cm) | Marine (cm) |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 18 x 14 | 18 x 12 | 18 x 10 |
1 | 22 x 16 | 22 x 14 | 22 x 12 |
2 | 24 x 19 | 24 x 16 | 24 x 14 |
3 | 27 x 22 | 27 x 19 | 27 x 16 |
4 | 33 x 24 | 33 x 22 | 33 x 19 |
5 | 35 x 27 | 35 x 24 | 35 x 22 |
6 | 41 x 33 | 41 x 27 | 41 x 24 |
8 | 46 x 38 | 46 x 33 | 46 x 27 |
10 | 55 x 46 | 55 x 38 | 55 x 33 |
12 | 61 x 50 | 61 x 46 | 61 x 38 |
15 | 65 x 54 | 65 x 50 | 65 x 46 |
20 | 73 x 60 | 73 x 54 | 73 x 50 |
25 | 81 x 65 | 81 x 60 | 81 x 54 |
30 | 92 x 73 | 92 x 65 | 92 x 60 |
40 | 100 x 81 | 100 x 73 | 100 x 65 |
50 | 116 x 89 | 116 x 81 | 116 x 73 |
60 | 130 x 97 | 130 x 89 | 130 x 81 |
80 | 146 x 114 | 146 x 97 | 146 x 89 |
100 | 162 x 130 | 162 x 114 | 162 x 97 |
120 | 195 x 130 | 195 x 114 | 195 x 97 |
References
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