Learn about watercolour pigments - how to read watercolour labels & speed-date your paints!

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  • Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
  • Wouldn't it be nice if you could get to know how your paints are going to behave, without just having to experiment and try them out? Instead of getting to know them over time you could see if you are compatible right from the beginning. Sort of speed-dating your paint, rather than going out a few times and then realising your are just not right for each other (I know I might be stretching the dating analogy a little here).
    Well, of course you can, if you just read and understand the information the manufacturer puts in teeny tiny writing on the tube. I help decipher it and let you understand why the name is utterly irrelevant, what the difference between Student and Artist paints is (and why you shouldn't be sniffy about Student paints), are single pigment paints better than multiple ones....? We also explore lightfastness, transparency, staining and lifting properties. And we look at what those pigment codes mean and how you can use them.
    Of course you might have pans, or the label could have fallen off the tube, so we go through how you can experiment and find out the properties of your paints yourself (and how the manufacturers sometimes get it wrong).
    If you want to find out more about colour mixing, please take a look here: • Colour mixing and theo...
    If you want to find out about granulation please look here: • Top tips for granulati...
    Jane Blundell is a brilliant colourist, so please visit her website www.janeblundellart.com for all your pigment questions.
    This blog from Jackson's Art is also very useful: www.jacksonsart.com/blog/2021...
    Here are the chapters:
    0:00 Introduction
    1:48 Name is irrelevant
    2:03 Student or Artist?
    2:38 What is the Series?
    3:17 Tube info introduction
    3:45 Light fastness
    4:17 Transparency
    4:42 Health warning
    5:08 Back to transparency/opacity
    5:35 Is it a staining colour?
    6:05 Sap Green example
    7:20 Single vs multi pigment colours
    9:02 Gamboge
    10:33 Same pigment different outcome PV23
    13:12 How to do your own tests
    18:09 Staining colours
    21:00 Hue - oops, I forgot
    If you enjoyed this film, please like and subscribe. I also have extended teaching courses available at www.lizchadertonstudio.co.uk and you can see more of my art at www.lizchaderton.co.uk
    I do a tip, trick or technique film each Sunday. And do you like the thumbnail? I thought I was taking myself too seriously….
    #lizchaderton #colourmixing #readyourlabels
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Комментарии • 85

  • @iforester4449
    @iforester4449 8 месяцев назад +7

    Thank you Liz. As with the previous comment I am going to re-swatch my paints. Your explanations are transparent, never opaque, stained into my memory and really lift my spirits! ☺

  • @giselavallejo4481
    @giselavallejo4481 7 месяцев назад +1

    Great lesson... Thanks for the time and effort you put into this. I learned more than I thought I would.😍🧠

  • @jeans113
    @jeans113 9 месяцев назад +1

    Wonderfully informative! Thank you so much for sharing this information.

  • @cathaire
    @cathaire Год назад +1

    Very informative & helpful! Thank you!

  • @patslark
    @patslark Год назад +1

    I just learned SO MUCH! Thank you!

  • @lynd4188
    @lynd4188 Год назад +1

    What an eye opener. Thanks

  • @margaretzee8162
    @margaretzee8162 10 месяцев назад +2

    Wow this was informative- thank you!!

  • @kerrynewell-wildlifeartist
    @kerrynewell-wildlifeartist 10 месяцев назад +1

    Another wonderful video Liz, thank you xXx

  • @susanhepburn6040
    @susanhepburn6040 3 года назад +4

    Once again, great explanations and demonstrations that I SO wish I'd known about when I first started in watercolour! Thank you so much for taking the time to do this, Liz - as always, very much appreciated!

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  3 года назад +1

      The perfect response! So pleased it was helpful

  • @liliaa1749
    @liliaa1749 2 года назад +1

    Thabk you so much for your video! this was very helpful. I was lost with all the student grade/artist grad/pigment/lightnfastedness, but you clarified everything really well!!

  • @freshspiritworks4535
    @freshspiritworks4535 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is wonderful information 😊

  • @colleenmcchesney1482
    @colleenmcchesney1482 Год назад +1

    Definitely a great explanation of what the pigment information is for a tube of paint. I have learned so much from this, especially about the lifting & staining label. I am going to have to go back & redo my color swatches with much testing information like this. Thanks for sharing this wonderful information with us. ❤💕

  • @norahmohammed1933
    @norahmohammed1933 Год назад +1

    Great explanation, thank you

  • @1msfit
    @1msfit Год назад +1

    This was great. I’ve heard some of this before, but your provision of info as to how to test our own paints is invaluable. Thank you for being so giving!

  • @stelleldir
    @stelleldir 2 года назад +1

    This is such an incredibly useful video and you are an excellent teacher! Thank you so much, I´m so happy I found your channel.

  • @63viet
    @63viet 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic information.

  • @CLOUDSINTHEKITCHEN
    @CLOUDSINTHEKITCHEN 3 года назад

    You are sooooo good. When I come back to live in the Uk, I will be your student :)

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  3 года назад

      Thanks! 😃 I'm so glad you like the films. If you ever fancy doing an online course, you wouldn't have to wait!!

  • @melodycrites3145
    @melodycrites3145 Год назад +1

    Very useful! Thanks!

  • @marilynanderson333
    @marilynanderson333 2 года назад

    I just discovered your post and absolutely love them. Thank you!😊

  • @allyw
    @allyw 3 года назад

    Always so knowledgeable about this medium. I will start to look more at the paints what they are combined of going forward. Thanks again Liz for your wisdom .

  • @dorothyminor7581
    @dorothyminor7581 2 года назад +1

    I’ve been looking for a video like this! Great information! Just what I wanted and needed! Thank you

  • @RMurrell31
    @RMurrell31 Год назад +1

    Once again, your tutorial is very informative and helpful. So pleased I stumbled upon your channel. I’m a fan and a new subscriber.

  • @Gemiangel47
    @Gemiangel47 3 года назад

    Thank you Liz that was very helpful. You explained it all beautifully 😊

  • @mariongowland402
    @mariongowland402 3 года назад +1

    Such a useful and informative video Liz, thanks.

  • @fortierdawn
    @fortierdawn 2 года назад +1

    Excellent video. Learned so much. Thank you!

  • @courtenay4130
    @courtenay4130 2 года назад +1

    Very helpful!

  • @yvonnegeelen6571
    @yvonnegeelen6571 3 года назад

    Thankyou you answered a lot of my paint pigment questions

  • @hsteil
    @hsteil 3 года назад

    Fantastic explanation! Thank you~

  • @anidaralopez5676
    @anidaralopez5676 2 года назад +1

    This was so helpful. Thank you!

  • @joycesnodgrass7068
    @joycesnodgrass7068 3 года назад +1

    Liz, thank you!

  • @kmorgan6890
    @kmorgan6890 3 года назад

    Great information…thank you.😍

  • @VoxUrania
    @VoxUrania Год назад +1

    How do people keep track of their swatches? In a separate sketchbook or some kind of portfolio? If I leave mine out, they breed and take over my table. 😊 Love the speed dating title.

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Год назад +2

      some people keep a separate book (I have a few films for making easy folded books which would be ideal), others just have a folder. I must admit to using scraps or old paintings, letting them breed and then throwing them all away once the info is stuck in my head.

  • @Merzui-kg8ds
    @Merzui-kg8ds 10 месяцев назад +1

    I got confused when you brushed out the violets and called the 2 on the right side "opaque" when compared to the others. I had the opposite understanding. To me, those looked more translucent, perhaps more able to be used over a first layer, with some of that first layer of paint showing through. What is my confusion?

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  10 месяцев назад

      That may be how it showed on the film, but some watercolours are more transparent than others. If it is transparent more of the underlying colour or paper will show through, if opaque it will cover more. Watercolour is never fully opaque, it is a matter of degrees.

  • @joykelempert9135
    @joykelempert9135 Месяц назад +1

    Hello. I am really enjoying your videos. I would appreciate if you could recommend a professional lightfast watercolor? I am getting more professional and it's a pity if they will fade overtime. Could you recommend in tins and tubes?

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Месяц назад

      It depends where you live and what your budget is. There is no single answer. Go for artist grade tunes, for max flexibility. Decebt paints will have a lightfastness rating for each colour.mEven high quality ranges have fugitive colours, so your will need to pick and choose eg Opera Rose is always fugitive whether it is Daniel Smith or a cheap Chinese make

    • @joykelempert9135
      @joykelempert9135 Месяц назад +1

      @@LizChadertonArt Thank you, dear Liz for your answer. Do you prefer generally tubes or tins with color.
      ?

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Месяц назад

      @@joykelempert9135 tube! More flexibility. You can use them to fill pans if you want and they are so quick to mix big creamy washes….

  • @fixacril
    @fixacril Год назад +1

    Is there a difference between the slash and the empty space in case of more pigments? Eg: "PBr7/PY43" or "PBr7 PY43" do both correspond to the mixing of the same pigments? It also happens to read additional values preceded by colon, es. "PBk6 PB15:6 PB15:2". What do they represent?
    Thanks in advance for any clarification, and thanks again for the very useful videos.
    P. S .: I'm sorry for the bad English, but I had to use Google's Translate

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Год назад +1

      I believe that the slash and the space are equivalent, just different ways of writing the same thing. PB15:6 and15:2 are slight variations of the same basic pigment. I believe it is the same chemical, in a different physical form, which leads to a variation in colour. I always go to www.handprint.com for pigment info. It’s amazing!

    • @fixacril
      @fixacril Год назад +1

      Many thanks for your kind reply!

  • @kimedwards3302
    @kimedwards3302 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you Liz for this very informative video. I just love learning from you.
    I do have a question. Why is the letter P (for pigment) always there? Isn’t it all pigment, and if so, why bother putting the P there at all?
    Thank you in advance. Kim (Canada)

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  6 месяцев назад

      This is only a guess but some of the abbreviations are the same as chemical elements, so it distinguishes them. The pigment codes are used throughout industry as well as art

  • @dannajolie
    @dannajolie 2 года назад

    Hi, Liz!
    How do you find the lightfastness of Dioxazine Purple from Sennelier? On the tube it says only "fair".
    Thank you!

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  2 года назад

      Ooh, my tube is so old it is illegible. I will look properly later. I haven't noticed a shift, but I don't want to work with colours which aren't light fast and it looks like that one has slipped through the net.

    • @dannajolie
      @dannajolie 2 года назад

      Yes, me, too, and I just ordered a 20 ml tube of this colour because it is gorgeous. Indeed the Sennelier one is not lightfast, according to them, even though many other brands rate their pv23 as being very good lightfast. Ouf

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  2 года назад

      @@dannajolie Bother!!!

  • @stanTrX
    @stanTrX Год назад +1

    Thank you. What about the pan colors?

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Год назад +1

      The wrappers on pan colours often have tge same info or you need to download the manufacturers colour chart from their website which will have it. pan and tube colours from the same manufacturer will have the same properties.

    • @stanTrX
      @stanTrX Год назад +1

      @@LizChadertonArt thank you, i have just noticed i use some colors a lot where some not at all. For example i dunno what to do with yellow ochre

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Год назад +1

      @@stanTrX we all have our preferences and end up using them quickly. Get a tube of your favourite and top up the pan. Leave the box open until it dries… yellow ochre is lovely for muted greens, stormy skies and skin tones…

    • @stanTrX
      @stanTrX Год назад +1

      @@LizChadertonArt very good suggestion. Appreciate

    • @LizChadertonArt
      @LizChadertonArt  Год назад +1

      @@stanTrX it’s great you are wearing the colours out. My heart sinks when I see pristine paint boxes!