Search results for 'palettes for watercolour'
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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 -
Schmincke Horadam Box 24 x 5ml Tubes
Starting at: £209.60
Schmincke Horadam Box 24 x 5ml Tubes. Learn More -
Schmincke Horadam Box 48 Half Pans
Starting at: £271.95
Schmincke Horadam Box 48 Half Pans. Learn More -
Daniel Smith 238 Try it dot Card
£25.80Daniel Smith "Try It" Dot Cards are a great way to sample this wonderful new range. Each colour dot has been placed on to a "Try It" Card which is actually watercolour paper. You can then wet each colour dot and use the card as a sort of palette. You'll be amazed just how far one dot of colour goes. You can even revisit a colour at a later date by re-wetting it. *Please note, this product is stored offsite. Please allow extra time for your order to be processed and dispatched. Learn More -
Lilian May, Mini Ceramic Palette
£12.00Ceramic palette, 4 wells, 8 cm x 8 cm Handmade in Somerset, UK. Learn More -
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Zinc White Pigment
Starting at: £4.00
Zinc White, or Zinc Oxide, is an artificial mineral pigment that was first produced in France in the late 18th century. Its use in commercial watercolours as Chinese White pre-dates its inclusion in oil painting. It is a semi-opaque, lightfast pigment, which dries very slowly in oil. Of all white pigments, it produces the most brittle paint film, so is not recommended in large quantities for impasto techniques. However, it is a good addition to a palette which requires a less overwhelming white than Titanium White.
Toxicity: B
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Mixing Slab
Starting at: £24.00
A glass slab with wooden cradle for the grinding of pigments.
The friction created between the sand-blasted surfaces of the glass slab and muller facilitates the thorough mixing of pigment and medium, creating a consistent and strong paint body. This slab can be used to manufacture many types of paint including watercolours, egg tempera and oils.
Mulling is of particular importance when making oil paint; simply mixing pigment and oil together using a palette knife will result in an unstable substance with poor plasticity, which contains a large amount of excess oil and unevenly distributed pigment particles. Thorough mulling in a figure-of-eight motion will enable the pigment to be fully combined into the binder, strengthening the resultant paint film.
PLEASE NOTE: The separate glass slabs are in stock but it is a call to order item due to the fact that we cannot guarantee its safe delivery, however well we package it. Please ring us to discuss your delivery options. In combination with the glass frame, delivery is more secure but we still cannot guarantee a delivery without breakage.
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Potters Pink Pigment
Starting at: £22.00
PR233
Potter's Pink is an artificial mineral pigment produced by roasting tin oxide with various other oxides. It was first discovered in the pottery region of Staffordshire in the late-1700s, and in the following century Winsor & Newton introduced Potter's Pink into their watercolour range under the name "pink colour". It went on to become a popular addition to watercolour palettes, offering an opaque, lightfast colour with a weak tinting strength and a medium level of oil absorption.
Toxicity A
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