Acrylic paint and gouache can both produce bold color, but they behave differently. Choosing between them depends on the surface, finish, working time, and whether the project needs a permanent acrylic layer or a matte paint effect for paper-based work.
The quick difference
Acrylic paint dries into a flexible film and is commonly used on canvas, wood, crafts, decor, and mixed media. Gouache is usually known for opaque matte color on paper, posters, sketchbooks, and illustration studies. Both are useful, but they are not interchangeable for every surface.
Finish and appearance
Acrylic can range from satin to matte or glossy depending on the paint and medium. It is often chosen when artists want layered color, texture, or a durable craft finish. Gouache usually has a flat matte look that photographs well and is useful for design studies, classroom posters, and color blocks.
Drying and layering
Acrylic dries quickly and becomes more water-resistant once dry. That makes it good for layering, repainting, and building up surfaces. Gouache can often be reactivated with water, which is helpful for blending on paper but less ideal for surfaces that need a more permanent finish.
Best surfaces
Use acrylic paint for canvas, craft wood, mixed media, decor, murals, and many studio projects. Use gouache for paper, illustration practice, student studies, posters, and matte color exercises. For young students and paper-based projects, the Gouache Paint product line can be a practical classroom option.
When to choose acrylic
- You are painting canvas, wood, decor, or a craft object.
- You want fast layering and stronger dried color films.
- You need larger formats for murals or group projects.
- You want specialty finishes such as metallic or pearl effects.
When to choose gouache
- You are working mainly on paper.
- You want a matte finish for posters or illustration.
- You need opaque color for studies and design practice.
- You want a paint that is easy to use in classroom exercises.
FAQ
Can gouache be used like acrylic?
Sometimes for practice, but acrylic is usually better for canvas, crafts, wood, decor, and surfaces that need a more durable dried layer.
Is acrylic or gouache better for beginners?
Acrylic is more versatile for general projects. Gouache is excellent for paper, illustration, and classroom color studies.
Can I use both?
Yes. Many creative spaces keep acrylic for projects and gouache for paper-based exercises.
Which paint should schools buy?
Schools often need both acrylic and gouache. Gouache is useful for fast paper studies, posters, and illustration lessons. Acrylic is better for canvas boards, craft objects, mural panels, and longer-lasting class projects. If the classroom uses both, store them separately and label surfaces clearly so students understand when to use each one.
Shopping note
If your project is a gift, wall panel, craft object, or decor piece, acrylic is usually the safer all-purpose choice. If the project is a color study on paper, gouache may be more convenient and easier to manage in a classroom setting.
Professional Acrylic PaintDurable acrylic layers15% OFF auto applied at checkout
Washable Gouache PaintMatte paper and classroom color15% OFF auto applied at checkout