Search results for 'Blue watercolours'
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Michael Harding Watercolours, The Nocturne Set, 6 x 15ml tubes
Starting at: £84.00
Michael Harding Watercolours, The Nocturne Set, 6 x 15ml tubes, including: Moonlight, Purple Haze, Cosmic Blue, Indigo, Vine Black, and Phthalocyanine Blue Lake. Learn More -
W&N Professional Watercolour Half Pan
Starting at: £7.90
Water colour, more than any other medium, reflects the unique characteristics of the pigments used. Winsor & Newton Professional Water Colours use only the finest pigments and are known for their brilliance, permanence and strength of colour. Learn More
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W&N Professional Watercolour 5ml Tube
Starting at: £8.25
Water colour, more than any other medium, reflects the unique characteristics of the pigments used and our Professional Water Colours use only the finest pigments, and are known for their brilliance, permanence and strength of colour. Learn More
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W&N Professional Watercolour Whole Pan
Starting at: £9.55
Water colour, more than any other medium, reflects the unique characteristics of the pigments used and our Professional Water Colours use only the finest pigments, and are known for their brilliance, permanence and strength of colour. Learn More
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W&N Professional Watercolour 14ml Tube
Starting at: £16.00
Water colour, more than any other medium, reflects the unique characteristics of the pigments used and our Professional Water Colours use only the finest pigments, and are known for their brilliance, permanence and strength of colour. Learn More
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Schmincke Liquid Frisket
Starting at: £5.40
Drawing gum for masking specific areas which should remain white on water-colour paper, smooth drawing carton, photographs or films. Apply with writing pen, cotton bud or wooden stick. Contains: synthetic resin dispersion without ammonia. Learn More -
Japanese Shell Gold
Starting at: £28.00
Japanese shell gold in ceramic pans.
Shell gold, so named because it was historically made and stored in shallow shells such as mussel shells, consists of finely powdered genuine gold mixed with a variety of gums. This Japanese shell gold range is made using the highest quality handmade Japanese gold and precious metal powders bound with Nikawa gelatine glue.
Mix with a bit of water and apply in the same way as watercolour (a drop of oxgall can be added to break the surface tension) After drying, it can be burnished to a soft, beautiful lustre using an agate stone burnishing tool.
Contains 0.4g Learn More -
Schmincke Masking Fluid
Starting at: £8.65
Drawing gum for masking specific areas which should remain white on water-colour paper, smooth drawing carton, photographs or films. For direct application with the dispensing bottle. Contains: synthetic resin dispersion without ammonia. Learn More -
Schmincke Supergranulating Watercolours Half Pan
Starting at: £8.10
Schmincke’s new supergranulating watercolour range is produced by combining two or more granulating pigments in each paint. Grouped into eight colour palettes, these beautiful shades have a textural surface effect, which is exaggerated when used on rougher and more structured paper. Learn More -
Phthalo Blue Pigment
Starting at: £8.00
PB15:3
Phthalo (Mona) Blue is a synthetic organic pigment, Copper Phthalocyanine, that has been in use since the 1930s. It has an extremely high tinting strength and is a staining colour, so cannot successfully be lifted in watercolour. It requires a wetting agent to fully disperse into a medium, and, when used at full strength, a copper sheen is visible in dried paint film. It is transparent, very lightfast, and has a medium-to-slow drying rate in oil.
Toxicity: C
While stocks last
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Prussian Blue Pigment
Starting at: £5.20
PB27
Prussian Blue is a synthetic organic pigment that was discovered by the paint maker Diesbach, apparently by accident, in Germany in the early eighteenth century. For many years, it was used not only as a colour in its own right, but also as a component of the original Hooker's Green. The other ingredient, gamboge, is highly fugitive, which is why many watercolours painted with Hooker's green have taken on a bluish tone with with age.
It is a very transparent and heavily staining colour. It dries quite quickly in oil, and can therefore wrinkly if applied too quickly. It is suitable for use in oils, watercolour, and egg tempera. However, it shouldn't be used in conjunction with alkali substances, such as Lead White or Calcium Carbonate as it can turn brown, so it isn't suitable for fresco. For the same reason, it isn't used with acrylic resin binders due to their alkaline nature, so most paint manufacturers will replace Prussian Blue with a mixture of Phthalo Blue and black in their acrylic ranges. It requires a wetting agent to fully disperse into a binder.
Toxicity: B
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Cobalt Blue Pigment
Starting at: £6.50
PB28
Cobalt Blue is an artificial mineral pigment, produced by the calcination of cobalt oxide and aluminium oxide. It has been widely used since the early 1800s, following its discovery by the French chemist Thenard at the beginning of the century. The name Cobalt has its roots in the German word Kobold, meaning imp or evil spirit. German miners specifically used this name in the late-Middle Ages, as the presence of Cobalt ore in the mines made the extraction of silver very difficult. They were possibly aware of the toxic properties of the mineral frustrating their efforts.
Cobalt remains a very popular colour today, and is present in most ranges of paints, being a semi-transparent pigment that is stable in all media. As a watercolour, all cobalt pigments tend to granulate. As an oil paint, it requires less oil content than most other pigments, and dries quite quickly. Like Cerulean Blue, some artists may choose to bind it with poppy oil, to avoid any possible colour changes brought about by the yellowish cast of linseed oil and the pigment's weak tinting strength.
Limeproof
Toxicity: C
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Rohrer & Klingner Liquid Watercolour Inks
Starting at: £9.30
Call to Order
Liquid Watercolour (series 27). 18 shades of highly concentrated organic pigment in a light acrylic base. Low dosage of the binder allows dried colour to be dissolved up to 24 hours after application. Colours retain their strength when diluted with water, Drying Retarder or Gloss Intensifier mediums. Undiluted applications may bronze when dry. Learn More