The library of rare colors

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • The Forbes Pigment Collection at the Harvard Art Museums is a collection of pigments, binders, and other art materials for researchers to use as standards: so they can tell originals from restorations from forgeries. It's not open to the public, because it's a working research library -- and because some of the pigments in there are rare, historic, or really shouldn't be handled by anyone untrained.
    More about the Forbes Pigment Collection: www.harvardart...
    The Harvard Art Museums: www.harvardart...
    Edited by Michelle Martin / @onthecrux
    Audio mix by Graham Haerther haerther.net/
    🟥 MORE FROM TOM: www.tomscott.com/
    (you can find contact details and social links there too)
    📰 WEEKLY NEWSLETTER with good stuff from the rest of the internet: www.tomscott.c...
    ❓ LATERAL, free weekly podcast: lateralcast.com/ / lateralcast
    ➕ TOM SCOTT PLUS: / tomscottplus
    👥 THE TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES: / techdif

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @TomScottGo
    @TomScottGo  5 лет назад +9335

    I realised, after filming this, that it feels a little weird to have my introduction outside the Museum and the interview inside. But I'm weeks out of Boston now, so it has to stand!

    • @wongmjane
      @wongmjane 5 лет назад +66

      >1 week ago

    • @mug1wara262
      @mug1wara262 5 лет назад +33

      how long ago did you flim this and why did you put this 1 week ago

    • @mvwinf
      @mvwinf 5 лет назад +335

      I didn’t think it was weird!

    • @cheersluv5510
      @cheersluv5510 5 лет назад +79

      It feels like you're just pointing out a fact as you happen to walk past it, and not like you're about to go inside

    • @anto687
      @anto687 5 лет назад +202

      Works just fine, gives a general location then the interview!

  • @kieran461
    @kieran461 5 лет назад +9319

    This feels like something someone would start as a hobby, and somehow turned it into a job.

    • @jl721ATcairn
      @jl721ATcairn 5 лет назад +136

      The pigment library or the channel?

    • @GabyGeorge1996
      @GabyGeorge1996 5 лет назад +286

      I have a feeling they’re referring to the pigment collection; but I also feel like the statement is equally applicable to the channel

    • @jl721ATcairn
      @jl721ATcairn 5 лет назад +46

      @@GabyGeorge1996 kind of my point

    • @GabyGeorge1996
      @GabyGeorge1996 5 лет назад +30

      John Lasher touché

    • @dustinwheat4096
      @dustinwheat4096 5 лет назад +27

      As it should be. Passion will keep you driven for decades

  • @acrouzet
    @acrouzet 5 лет назад +8393

    3:17 "Lead white is toxic in the way that lead is...toxic."
    Best quote in the video.

    • @gonaldocr24
      @gonaldocr24 5 лет назад +137

      You can tell its an Aspen by the way it is

    • @TheVergile
      @TheVergile 5 лет назад +336

      well, its a reasonable observation. Some lead compounds arent toxic at all (for example if the lead is bound in a very stable way). Some lead compounds are toxic, but in a different way (due to a different mechanism) than pure lead.

    • @veloriders
      @veloriders 5 лет назад +60

      @@TheVergile True. My mouth has a lot of mercury in it.

    • @Azivegu
      @Azivegu 5 лет назад +54

      Instructions not clear, rubbed lead white over my phallus.

    • @anderslolle2147
      @anderslolle2147 5 лет назад +18

      The mummi brown was really funny too 😂

  • @billysmith6891
    @billysmith6891 3 года назад +2631

    Going straight from VantaBlack to showing Stuart Semple's Pinkest Pink and Diamond Dust was a move of pure classiness.

    • @jezusmylord
      @jezusmylord Год назад +75

      Now i get it, that is pure comedy genius

    • @bab00shka48
      @bab00shka48 Год назад

      @@jezusmylord Stuart Semple is the definition of classy kiss my ass

    • @finleydrage5066
      @finleydrage5066 Год назад +36

      Omg yess I laughed at this so hard and my family looked at me weird

    • @The-Silliest-Little-Guy
      @The-Silliest-Little-Guy Год назад +32

      ​@jezusmylord i might be stupid but whats the joke?

    • @crypticcorvid
      @crypticcorvid Год назад +338

      @@The-Silliest-Little-Guy Iirc, Anish Kapoor is an artist who bought the sole right to use the vantablack pigment, so in retaliation Stuart Semple (also an artist) created the pinkest pink and made it available for everyone EXCEPT Kapoor. Semple said he'd make pinkest pink available to Kapoor only when he allows other people to use vantablack. Semple also created diamond dust, which is supposed to be the most shiniest glitter.

  • @psychosorcerer9438
    @psychosorcerer9438 5 лет назад +1784

    Glad to see Stuart's Pinkest Pink in there.

    • @SteelSkin667
      @SteelSkin667 5 лет назад +256

      I like that they showed them right after mentioning Vantablack.

    • @Charky_Creations
      @Charky_Creations 5 лет назад +76

      I imagine he'd get a giggle out of that positioning

    • @nazhif1
      @nazhif1 5 лет назад +22

      glad im not the only one who's glad

  • @cosmicjenny4508
    @cosmicjenny4508 5 лет назад +12318

    Imagine dying, being mummified, and then thousands of years later, getting mushed up and put on a canvas.
    There’s donating your body to science, and then there’s whatever this is...

    • @PhoenixClank
      @PhoenixClank 5 лет назад +883

      Donating your body to art?

    • @Howtard
      @Howtard 5 лет назад +750

      I don't think it could be called "donating" in general, I doubt anybody thought to ask them for informed consent for paint-making in their lifetimes.

    • @Ellyerre
      @Ellyerre 5 лет назад +440

      Well, it's not as bad as being eaten as medicine which happened in Europe during the 12th to 16th century.

    • @peter_smyth
      @peter_smyth 5 лет назад +578

      Do you mean dyeing?

    • @theotherwalt
      @theotherwalt 5 лет назад +332

      I want to know how the idea of using mummified remains as a pigment in a paint came about....
      Did someone dig up a body for some other reason and think, "that is a really nice color."?

  • @kuronosan
    @kuronosan 5 лет назад +3941

    Haha, just had to get that shot of pinkest pink just after vantablack.

    • @bookslug2919
      @bookslug2919 5 лет назад +43

      Just wait.... someone will try to market pink nanotubes for 'lady-scientists'

    • @Jemima1377
      @Jemima1377 5 лет назад +335

      @@bookslug2919 You are not getting the point... ^_~

    • @DrZaius3141
      @DrZaius3141 5 лет назад +147

      @@jorgeamadosoriaramirez8953 No need to google it, just watch Tom's video on it.^^

    • @camiblack1
      @camiblack1 5 лет назад +126

      Not just that, but Diamond "Put Your Finger in This" Dust.

    • @LilChuunosuke
      @LilChuunosuke 5 лет назад +67

      I was afraid the video wouldn't include shots of stuart semple's colors, but they did!

  • @Sypaka
    @Sypaka 5 лет назад +4611

    "When I was 18, i sloppily said: I rather collect colors then go to work"
    ...
    "50 years later, here I am, at this University.
    I am the Master of Colors and Pigmentresearch."

  • @zappawoman5183
    @zappawoman5183 5 лет назад +19291

    I had a dream about a brand new colour I discovered! However, it turned out to be just a pigment of my imagination...

    • @OrionMelodyMusic
      @OrionMelodyMusic 5 лет назад +751

      Oh, hi Dad!

    • @daniellewillgruber2768
      @daniellewillgruber2768 5 лет назад +604

      Sighs. Take your upvote.

    • @Lardum
      @Lardum 5 лет назад +237

      @@OrionMelodyMusic I did not hit her I did nooooot.
      Oh hi Dad

    • @powpuck5031
      @powpuck5031 5 лет назад +577

      I see what hue did there

    • @rkirke1
      @rkirke1 5 лет назад +342

      I had an inkling there would be bad puns to follow. Seems to be making people madder..

  • @lucweerts4970
    @lucweerts4970 5 лет назад +2371

    I study chemistry and one of the best things is when your product turns a colour you have never seen. I had a liquid that was red from the top and green from the side, turns out it was the Tyndall effect.

    • @pandakatiefominz
      @pandakatiefominz 5 лет назад +161

      I have a fountain pen ink that works something like that. It's a green ink with a red sheen. Jacques Herbin 1670 Anniversary Emerald de Chivor. It also shimmers gold

    • @rickh3714
      @rickh3714 5 лет назад +116

      Pthalocyanine blue was invented by chance. My dad once worked with the ICI scientist that discovered it. Monastral blue. An enamel dish had a crack in it which turned bright blue when holding a solution.

    • @clockworkkirlia7475
      @clockworkkirlia7475 4 года назад +67

      Tyndall... TO THE GOOGLEMOBILE! It definitely rings a bell but Chemistry is definitely my weakest science. :P Anything I should know that google won't tell me? Thank you for this knew knowledge.
      EDIT: Oh, yay! Structural colour! Butterfly wings and irises and biological photo-physics! (as I'm sure you already know) I probably heard of it around cuttlefish or chameleons. Now I have a fun fact: the vast majority of blues in the animal world are not pigment colour; they're structural colour. That's still real colour, of course (eat it, NatGeo), but it's all down to processes like the Tyndall effect instead of simple pigment-based absorption-vs-reflection.

    • @gairisiuil
      @gairisiuil 4 года назад +7

      makes me think of the shiny bits on US $10s and $20s that's iridescent because of copper particles

    • @58mph48
      @58mph48 4 года назад +1

      @@clockworkkirlia7475 Huh. I heard of it in relation to Japanese toilet humour.

  • @MarkWTK
    @MarkWTK 5 лет назад +2418

    colour exist
    artist: *gotta catch them all*

    • @AngryKittens
      @AngryKittens 5 лет назад +48

      PETA: colors must be free!

    • @Mr_Makina
      @Mr_Makina 5 лет назад +29

      *gotta shade them all*

    • @RafaelCouto
      @RafaelCouto 5 лет назад +9

      now I just have to make a game about this.

    • @J374338
      @J374338 5 лет назад +2

      天吉Mark I’m gonna be the KARAA MASTAA!!

    • @oceanfloor3524
      @oceanfloor3524 5 лет назад +7

      i am an artist, i can confirm

  • @iabervon
    @iabervon 5 лет назад +493

    Someone else was commenting on vantablack that it was especially odd when it was on crinkled aluminum foil; it absorbs light so well that the foil looks flat because how it looks doesn't depend on the angle of the surface. It looks like a hole in reality or a rendering error rather than a paint color.

    • @jimmurphy6095
      @jimmurphy6095 Год назад +24

      Someone had painted a ping pong ball with it and it looked like a hole in the Space-Time continuum when they held it up.

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday 5 лет назад +754

    Awesome video.

  • @Axalon45
    @Axalon45 5 лет назад +656

    Having a shot of Stuart Semple's "exclusive" dyes seconds after the bit on Vantablack was a class act that you may well never top, Tom.
    Well done.

  • @leonkoster01
    @leonkoster01 5 лет назад +2633

    mummie brown = ground up mummie
    baby oil = ground up b..... wait what

    • @cesariojpn
      @cesariojpn 5 лет назад +377

      Baby Oil is distilled Baby. Put them into a pressure cooker, and tap the resulting distillate.

    • @Lyle-xc9pg
      @Lyle-xc9pg 5 лет назад +83

      Oh but its only late-term aborted fetuses

    • @The_Jzoli
      @The_Jzoli 5 лет назад +170

      @@cesariojpn Baby powder on the other hand...

    • @torstengang5521
      @torstengang5521 5 лет назад +44

      I laughed. Am I bad person?

    • @baconwizard
      @baconwizard 5 лет назад +55

      Fred Austere no, we are terrible people

  • @SomeGuyCalledJ
    @SomeGuyCalledJ 5 лет назад +305

    Stuart Semple's pink is really the pinkest pink I've ever seen (4:36), and is worth buying just to make pink things at home

    • @LilChuunosuke
      @LilChuunosuke 5 лет назад +26

      It's insanely cheap as well, so it's worth investing in!

    • @kanamekiyru
      @kanamekiyru Год назад +4

      I bought his pink and yellow just to see it in person. Camera doesn't do it justice

  • @neilsutcliffe5825
    @neilsutcliffe5825 Год назад +82

    I am fascinated by the extinction of Quinacridone Gold. It was discontinued as an artist grade pigment in 2018, as the automotive industry simply stopped using it, and it was no longer available to artists. Artists are a small percentage of the consumers of pigment and we simply get what other industries need.

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke Год назад +5

      PO49 stopped being used at the turn of the century in the automotive world, so it took almost 2 decades for the majority of the remaining supply to be used up. It's still available as a pigment, it just isn't commercially used to produce paint anymore, likely due to it being cost prohibitive to obtain in large quantities.

  • @mikaelagomez5424
    @mikaelagomez5424 5 лет назад +844

    My favorite part of this video is seeing Stuart Semple's color creations featured immediately after the Anish Kapoor owned "Vanta-Black." If you're not aware of the awesomely petty but insanely entertaining feud between the two, please look it up.

    • @sirgarberto
      @sirgarberto Год назад +30

      came here looking for this, was not disappointed

    • @TS6815
      @TS6815 Год назад +29

      i can't recall if this one came out before or after but Tom did an interview with Stuart regarding the feud and Pinkest Pink

    • @sirgarberto
      @sirgarberto Год назад +8

      @@TS6815 that was about two years (2017) before this (2019)

    • @MH_VOID
      @MH_VOID Год назад +28

      good reaction by Mr. Semple. Quite unethical for Mr. Kapoor to get exclusive access to it, unless it is only for a reasonably short period of time (certainly no more than a decade)

    • @luviana_
      @luviana_ Год назад +9

      @@MH_VOID and this is exactly why I am against patents

  • @itaybron
    @itaybron 5 лет назад +183

    when you're not sure if you want to major in chemistry or art so you just do both

  • @Z0mbieAnt
    @Z0mbieAnt 5 лет назад +627

    Putting vantablack under a reflective glass plate kinda defeats it's purpose, doesn't it?

    • @JNCressey
      @JNCressey 5 лет назад +257

      Who would win? The world's blackest black, or the world's mirrorest mirror?

    • @Ken_neThT
      @Ken_neThT 5 лет назад +13

      There's a portion of it that isn't covered by the glass as seen in the video... I think

    • @pauljones3017
      @pauljones3017 5 лет назад +59

      Not if you don't want people to start touching it.

    • @suegaashoeseok4895
      @suegaashoeseok4895 5 лет назад +18

      @@JNCressey u mean 'one mirror boi'?

    • @neolexiousneolexian6079
      @neolexiousneolexian6079 5 лет назад +22

      Not really. Glass reflects quite a bit specularly, but it exhibits basically no diffuse illumination (because that light gets transmitted instead).

  • @DasGanon
    @DasGanon 5 лет назад +399

    "We have 60 different samples of Hematite"
    How awesome would it be if they eventually got a Hematite sample from Mars to add to the collection after some astronaut decides "Hey, I'm going to paint something out of paint I make myself"

    • @Ezullof
      @Ezullof 5 лет назад +18

      Hematite from Mars would probably be very abrasive, so not a good pigment. There are also probably many types of Martian hematites just like on Earth (well, technically Earth has a more diverse geology so not as many, but you get the point).
      Of course it's still cool if you can say something was painted with Martian pigments.

    • @vladolkhovetsky1070
      @vladolkhovetsky1070 5 лет назад +26

      Wonder if you can turn the moons regolith in to pigment, luner gray,

    • @andreww2098
      @andreww2098 5 лет назад +34

      @@vladolkhovetsky1070 One of the former Apollo astronauts Alan Bean painted pictures using moon dust and Apollo spacecraft parts

    • @Abdega
      @Abdega 5 лет назад +15

      @vlad olkhovetsky
      They did that in the video game “Portal 2”

    • @dewolen
      @dewolen 5 лет назад +50

      @@Abdega "The bean counters told me we literally could not afford to buy seven dollars worth of moon rocks, much less seventy million. Bought 'em anyway. Ground 'em up, mixed em into a gel. And guess what? Ground up moon rocks are pure poison. I am deathly ill."
      - Cave Johnson

  • @mukrifachri
    @mukrifachri 5 лет назад +291

    Chemistry lab storage + Art gallery. Interesting.

    • @MICHGO1
      @MICHGO1 5 лет назад +3

      SO IS THE SUNLIGHT BRIGHTENING UP THE ROOM.

  • @jpe1
    @jpe1 5 лет назад +148

    Tom, while you are at Harvard you might enjoy visiting the *Ware Collection of Blaschka Glass Models of Plants* (aka *Glass Flowers*). It’s one of those “has to be seen to be believed” things, pictures don’t do it justice. Amazing in detail, artistry, and scope, it’s both a teaching tool and a stunning artistic achievement.

    • @Dinlitla
      @Dinlitla 5 лет назад +2

      Agree...that collection is remarkable!

    • @ballinangel3231
      @ballinangel3231 5 лет назад +1

      I've seen these! They are truly lovely!

    • @stevepeaple9051
      @stevepeaple9051 Год назад +3

      It' so remarkable it's verges on ordinary. I was there a few years back and they are so perfect the collection starts looking like a room filled with random grasses. I also love those crystal rooms nearby. Wish I could see this collection.

    • @jpe1
      @jpe1 Год назад +5

      @@stevepeaple9051 I will have to remember the phrase “so remarkable [that it] verges on ordinary.” I definitely get what you are saying there!

  • @keinGenug
    @keinGenug 5 лет назад +456

    I have a weird obsession with color and pigment, and this video was heaven for me

    • @lawrencecalablaster568
      @lawrencecalablaster568 5 лет назад +6

      isaac grandas Me too :)

    • @takarifan
      @takarifan 5 лет назад +4

      Yup, this is Color Mecca for me.

    • @dennismitchell5276
      @dennismitchell5276 2 года назад

      If I keep using egg tempra, I'm afraid I'll get that obsession.

    • @irissupercoolsy
      @irissupercoolsy 2 года назад +3

      i have been painting & drawing a lot most of my life, so same... I clicked on this video really fast

    • @creativesolutionstoart
      @creativesolutionstoart Год назад

      Same… I got really giddy when I saw the title of this video

  • @SheriLynNut
    @SheriLynNut 2 года назад +100

    As a graphic designer for 23 years, the colors in this video took my breath away- I stopped it and took about 100 screen shots! I’m so very happy there are people who have preserved this part of history, and those who continue to develop new material for us all to share. What a neat video, Thank you.

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke Год назад +1

      You never got into gouache or its close relative, watercolour? It seems to be the primary medium for graphic design, so it's strange to me that you'd be new to any of these colours.

    • @amozinshade484
      @amozinshade484 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@mydogeatspukein Graphic design, we studied different things, this knowledge is more related to fine art or illustration maybe.

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke 11 месяцев назад

      @@amozinshade484 gouache is very popular if not THE standard in graphic design, and all of these colours are very prominent in that medium, as I already said.

    • @amozinshade484
      @amozinshade484 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@mydogeatspuke Seriously? If you don't realize that other countries didn't have access to gouache or even the fact fine art knowledge hasn't been accessible, you lucked out. Again all you needed was at least decent quality paint and in my case it was acrylics, of course we learned color theory but pigment knowledge is again not really covered, probably mentioned but not really. When I studied graphic design it is mostly digital stuff, and a lot to deal with printing.

    • @mydogeatspuke
      @mydogeatspuke 11 месяцев назад

      @@amozinshade484 🙄🙄🙄🙄🙄 all countries have access to gouache, stop being silly. Gouache is not a fine art material. Digital graphic design is incredibly modern, so all you're really doing is saying that you're too young to know anything about anything and that upsets you. Hardly my problem. Simmer down.

  • @mateuszmalenta4570
    @mateuszmalenta4570 5 лет назад +92

    I recommend reading 'Secret Lives of Colour' by Kassia St Clair if anyone wants to read about origins and uses of some of the most popular and influential colours.

    • @lars1588
      @lars1588 4 года назад +3

      I just put it on hold at my local library. I should be able to pick it up soon. Thanks for the recommendation! I've been looking for some new, interesting reading material.

  • @Tefans97
    @Tefans97 Год назад +7

    thanks to Tom Scott for my win in a pub quiz last week, one of the questions was on mummy-based pigments, another about the 1904 olympic marathon (from citation needed). Couldn't have done it without him

  • @CrimsonMemes
    @CrimsonMemes Год назад +2

    Imagine how annoying an Earthquake would be there.

  • @TobiasRieper047
    @TobiasRieper047 2 года назад +23

    This is amazing, I could spend countless days glancing around there at all the colors, knowing they all have their own story behind them. Its fascinating, we should cherish things like this and the people that do those jobs.

    • @oliverp3545
      @oliverp3545 2 года назад

      I'm thinking about their practical uses, there are so many models I could use.

  • @Dakakeisalie
    @Dakakeisalie 5 лет назад +64

    Tom you never cease to amaze in finding bizarre yet fascinating places

  • @poweradereal
    @poweradereal Год назад +3

    0:01 i personally think of colors as how they are made through the combination of red yellow and blue watercolor paints. as i went to a waldorf school when i was younger and thats how they taught color

  • @sloanemactire8780
    @sloanemactire8780 3 года назад +6

    Props to the editor who put the B-roll of Pinkest Pink and Diamond Dust in right after talking about Vantablack. Brilliant!

  • @limebanter4603
    @limebanter4603 5 лет назад +128

    Mummy Brown is people!

    • @TheGahta
      @TheGahta 5 лет назад +8

      funnily enough, brown people

    • @diamond_miner_8670
      @diamond_miner_8670 5 лет назад +5

      is Soylent Green a shade of green? It better be or I'll be disappointed

    • @futurestoryteller
      @futurestoryteller 5 лет назад

      Interestingly that's said to be the reaction many people had to learning this news. Iirc artists knew, but the public was horrified, and that stymied the sale of "mummy brown" from that point forward.

    • @rachele3334
      @rachele3334 3 года назад +1

      I love a good obscure movie reference, especially when I get the joke. 😂

    • @aburningwalloftext8778
      @aburningwalloftext8778 3 года назад

      When you didn’t have a skin color colored pencil:

  • @tommegg8486
    @tommegg8486 5 лет назад +83

    When I see old blue pigment what can I think about is only how expensive they are

    • @tommegg8486
      @tommegg8486 5 лет назад

      @LagiNaLangAko23 it's crazy expensive back then

    • @KamuiPan
      @KamuiPan 3 года назад

      Sure, look at the raw material and process of making it. Cobalt is not a soft material.

    • @emilv.3693
      @emilv.3693 3 года назад +1

      Purple was even more expensive

    • @allangibson2408
      @allangibson2408 3 года назад

      @@KamuiPan Ultramarine Blue has no cadmium in it. It is made by grinding up Lapis Lazuli gemstones from Afghanistan. Then as now, going to Afghanistan was bad for your health (for exactly the same reasons).

  • @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879
    @evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 5 лет назад +14

    I used to custom match paint colors manually (as opposed to using a color sensor and having a computer make the formula) for a couple paint stores and i fell in love with it! this collection is absolute heaven!! wow, i can only imagine the colors my monitor cant show accurately....

  • @eily_b
    @eily_b Год назад +21

    Nice to see some Kremer Pigmente 3:47 on their shelves, too. Amazing company making pigments in Bavaria, Germany.

  • @LingTinaTV
    @LingTinaTV 5 лет назад +48

    As an artist, it's amazing to look at the differences in consistently and how paint changes over time. It's fascinating that we now have things like the Pantone charts and grading to get exact shades and variations. Furthermore, there are modern digital tools that try and copy traditional looks and textures of classical mediums. However, I don't think we've gotten to the point where we can simulate the exact outcomes. We can only get close to it.

  • @benmaughan7452
    @benmaughan7452 Год назад +1

    I swear, these Tom Scott videos from 3 years ago literally just spawn in every day

  • @aretorta
    @aretorta 5 лет назад +25

    My favourite field: the chemistry of colour! Specially form a historical point of view!

  • @rayfairbanks6280
    @rayfairbanks6280 Год назад +1

    The "blasted heath" has some very interesting colors I've been told

  • @crashrose6128
    @crashrose6128 2 года назад +8

    I work at an art supply store with some high end specialty paints, and one of my favorite things to do to demonstrate the difference between lead oils and non lead oils is have customers hold a tube of a modern paint, and then hand them a tube of red lead

    • @Khunark
      @Khunark Год назад +1

      so what's the difference?

    • @crashrose6128
      @crashrose6128 Год назад

      @@Khunark in terms of how the paint itself paints the difference is really in things like flexibility and achievability, but the reason i have people hold the two tubes side by side is to feel the weight. the tubes with lead in them are SIGNIFICANTLY heavier than those without.

  • @japjotsinghrajbans
    @japjotsinghrajbans 8 месяцев назад +1

    Can we please take a moment to appreciate the pixels that are displaying the colour?

  • @GordonHenderson
    @GordonHenderson 5 лет назад +10

    Burnt Umber - one of my favourite colours when a kid in school - I now live a few miles from one place they used to make it and worked in the building for a short while - long after the furnace had been removed though. Fascinating stuff!

  • @martijnvanweele6204
    @martijnvanweele6204 5 лет назад +10

    3:20 *looks at a shade of brown on a canvas* "Are you my mummy?"

  • @Vousie
    @Vousie Год назад +1

    Kudos to you for noting print uses cyan, magenta and yellow, not red, yellow, blue. Too many artists try red, yellow, blue and then find they can't mix the bright colours they want.

  • @michaelnelson2976
    @michaelnelson2976 5 лет назад +12

    I love this video, this is a perfect example of the things that matter out in the world in their own way that you shine light on Tom. Loving it.

  • @Віктор-с5щ3м
    @Віктор-с5щ3м 5 лет назад +451

    Him: “Mummy brown is made up from crushed Egyptian mummies.”
    Me: Hmmm interesting
    Also him: “Indian yellow...”
    Me: absolutely disgusting..

    • @josinboop6132
      @josinboop6132 3 года назад +30

      Baby blue "crush up ba...
      .

    • @doubleT84
      @doubleT84 3 года назад +5

      When the supply of ancient mummys ran out some people made their own, for the profits.
      Let that sink in.

    • @variegatus4674
      @variegatus4674 3 года назад

      if theres an 'Indian Brown' it'd obviously be the aftermath of cheap indian food

  • @trumpetperson11
    @trumpetperson11 3 года назад +5

    This was way more interesting than I expected it to be.

  • @santiastronomo
    @santiastronomo Год назад +2

    the fact the thumbnail says the colors WILL kill me and not COULD kill you is scaring me

  • @juliaconnell
    @juliaconnell 5 лет назад +5

    it's one of my dearest dreams to see a new colour

  • @totallynoteverything1.
    @totallynoteverything1. Год назад +1

    gotta love the old timey labels they use

  • @LindsayDaly
    @LindsayDaly 5 лет назад +331

    Anish Kapoor is *S* *H* *A* *K* *I* *N* *G*

    • @ricchburglar
      @ricchburglar 5 лет назад +2

      Who is that sounds like a famous chess player.

    • @sciblastofficial9833
      @sciblastofficial9833 5 лет назад +16

      @@ricchburglar Some guy who stole the Pinkest Pink pigment, after the guy who made the P.P. pigment got jealous at him becaude Anish got to have Vantablack (one of the darkest blacks) and the P.P. creator didn't.

    • @fomalhaut_the_great
      @fomalhaut_the_great 4 года назад +13

      @@sciblastofficial9833 Anish stole the (at the time) blackest pigment from the artistic community as a whole. The greedy bastard.

    • @moduspwnenz
      @moduspwnenz 3 года назад +2

      @@fomalhaut_the_great how? Its an expensive pigment to make and used for aeronautics. Thats like complaining Apple is greedy for trademarking something they made

  • @symir547
    @symir547 Год назад +1

    This guy looks like what a director of a pigments museum would look like

  • @grabasandwich
    @grabasandwich 5 лет назад +14

    "This beautifully painted winter scene smells like sh*t!"

    • @Riolupai
      @Riolupai 3 года назад +2

      well, y'see, the brown used for the wood of the tree is... well...

  • @SarahAndBoston
    @SarahAndBoston 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for this awesome video! I am a painter and I live in Boston. I’ve been to this exhibit before, but only a small amount of pigments are out of display, the vast majority are too far away to be really observed, so this video was a treat! Thank you.

  • @trevoranderson4414
    @trevoranderson4414 4 года назад +5

    This is one of those exhibits I never would've sauntered into on my own accord, but Tom manages to put it in an interesting light.
    5 stars, Tom 👍

  • @IntegralKing
    @IntegralKing Год назад +1

    library: beautifully aligned by color and brightness
    curator: OMG EVERYTHING'S OUT OF PLACE! HIGGLEDY PIGGLEDYYY!!!!

  • @bluzshadez
    @bluzshadez 5 лет назад +3

    The best thing that I've learned from this video is that the Archive of Colours are like books that can be taken out of the display cases and can be studied/ used for reference. I thought those were just for display.

    • @PurpleShift42
      @PurpleShift42 5 лет назад +1

      bluzshadez Yep, specialist research libraries can end up collecting all sorts of things! There are other libraries out there that collect various chemical compounds for people to do assays and chemical analysis on.

    • @bluzshadez
      @bluzshadez 5 лет назад

      @@PurpleShift42 Thanks for sharing information. I grew up with the notion that Libraries are only for books and other printed materials, movies, vinyl, etc. I learned something new today. God bless!

  • @a.w.1499
    @a.w.1499 2 года назад +1

    I could probably spend a whole day looking at the pigment collection.

  • @GermaphobeMusic
    @GermaphobeMusic 5 лет назад +72

    The pinkest pink better be in this

    • @todbilegotgonbat3943
      @todbilegotgonbat3943 5 лет назад +4

      How's the blacker Vantablack?

    • @randomizednamme
      @randomizednamme 5 лет назад +18

      4:37 I think

    • @WoLpH
      @WoLpH 5 лет назад +5

      Don't forget about the yellowest yellow, greenest green and loveliest blue

    • @TotalElipse
      @TotalElipse 5 лет назад +19

      It is! They have most of Stuarts stuff in there. As randomizednamme pointed out you can see two of his pigments at 4:37.

    • @ralanham76
      @ralanham76 5 лет назад

      Had to have the diamond dust it's a girl's best friend

  • @Tvianne
    @Tvianne Год назад +2

    I'd gladly spend hours there, just to look at the coours and learn about the ancient pigments. It's so fascinating. Pity is not open to the public.

  • @deannam-host6584
    @deannam-host6584 Год назад +4

    As an artist i found this both fascinating and delightful 😀 thanks for spotlighting this! 👍

  • @lars1588
    @lars1588 4 года назад +1

    Casually pours all of the colors together in a bucket and mixes them.

  • @salmeza85
    @salmeza85 3 года назад +4

    Would have thought every shade of colour imaginable would have been discovered. Especially in the digital age. Great to be educated on something new. Thank you.

    • @rubybuttons668
      @rubybuttons668 3 года назад +3

      Oh no, people are still discovering, creating and working towards pigments. It’s not always a new colour they find but rather a pure hue, or a more stable and light fast one.

  • @bronzejourney5784
    @bronzejourney5784 2 года назад +1

    1:38 I love the way the building and sorting is arranged.

  • @thetimitzers
    @thetimitzers 5 лет назад +12

    As a partial colorblind I'm actually quite curious to how they all actually look on our eyes...

    • @leifvejby8023
      @leifvejby8023 5 лет назад +4

      Me too!

    • @lassievision
      @lassievision 5 лет назад +10

      Depending on your type of colour blindness, some people have had great results with enchroma glasses, which can help to give an idea about how the rest of us see colours.

  • @calvinthedestroyer
    @calvinthedestroyer Год назад +1

    Must be hell to find and maintain all of their SDS

  • @elmadicine
    @elmadicine Год назад +3

    um... did we gloss over the part where it distinctly featured "dragon's blood" as an ingredient

  • @sadpacman3290
    @sadpacman3290 Год назад +1

    I actually got excited when I found out they actually have mummy brown. That's such a weird thing, the whole mummy fascination of the Victorians.

  • @terrotorotbart8319
    @terrotorotbart8319 5 лет назад +67

    This was certainly a colourful video. :D

    • @dlrss1v274
      @dlrss1v274 4 года назад +1

      hue are nice

    • @HolyKhaaaaan
      @HolyKhaaaaan 3 года назад

      Sends mum to whack with an umbrella

  • @Mama_of_a_dragon
    @Mama_of_a_dragon Год назад

    I would love to visit that library and spend an afternoon just looking at everything.

  • @andrewtaylor-innes9791
    @andrewtaylor-innes9791 5 лет назад +8

    Fun fact uranium was used as a green pigment back in the 1800s.

    • @tompw3141
      @tompw3141 5 лет назад +4

      It was used as an orange pigment (in pottery glazes) until the 1950s!

  • @SpeakerMunkey
    @SpeakerMunkey 3 года назад +2

    Incredible. They should do some kind of public exhibition to show what they are doing. It would be so interesting.

  • @artstsym
    @artstsym 5 лет назад +49

    So, is the gallery UV shielded? Obviously part of it is understanding how they age, but it still feels like that might compromise their practical use to some degree.

    • @niklasohlsson
      @niklasohlsson 5 лет назад +1

      Meris I was thinking the same. Thought someone else had written a comment about it, and I was right :)

    • @Helveteshit
      @Helveteshit 5 лет назад +3

      Doubt that part of the gallery is within the light source. Even then, it is behind several layers of glass. At that point, most of the UV should of been filtered/diminished greatly in strength.

    • @MICHGO1
      @MICHGO1 5 лет назад +1

      IT LOOKED LIKE IT WAS LINED WITH WINDOW WITH SUNLIGHT BEAMING IN.

    • @NazzaKandybar
      @NazzaKandybar 4 года назад +19

      All the light in the gallery is UV filtered. These pigments have been blasted by light for decades and only the thinnest edge where the light reaches the pigment is affected. If you take the lid off the containers you can see that most of the pigment is unaffected, so we get a sample of both the degraded and original material for analysis.

  • @JohnFleshman
    @JohnFleshman 2 года назад +1

    That jar of Realgar with the Poison label is from about 40 miles from my home. too cool!

  • @jahrenskiashkevron1499
    @jahrenskiashkevron1499 5 лет назад +25

    Very interesting! Even thought I can only name about 12 colors.

    • @kvweber
      @kvweber 5 лет назад +5

      Start with the ones at the beginning of a Bob Ross video, that'll give you a good jumping point! :D

    • @vividandlucid
      @vividandlucid 5 лет назад +3

      Get your Titanium Hwhite

    • @DaedalusYoung
      @DaedalusYoung 5 лет назад +2

      Phthalo Blue.

    • @hyacinthivy7479
      @hyacinthivy7479 4 года назад +1

      Creamy Pasta Good pun!🤣

  • @BrunoLuzdeJesus
    @BrunoLuzdeJesus Год назад +1

    love how the thumbnail goes "some colors WILL kill you" not as if the COULD kill you if you were to ingest them, but as if they were an impeding doom, they will be your ending

  • @JollibeenosHasYourCoordinates
    @JollibeenosHasYourCoordinates 3 года назад +3

    1:34
    A "what Arabic"?!
    That caught me off-guard.

  • @freeBalochistan-n7l
    @freeBalochistan-n7l Год назад +1

    These pigments are so appetizing that I'd die eating them...

  • @lordeisschrank
    @lordeisschrank 5 лет назад +7

    If some of them are sensitive to light... then shouldn't they be stored in a darker room?

  • @LARAUJO_0
    @LARAUJO_0 Год назад +1

    Even with the limitations of cameras and digital screens, there were some really nice colours shown off here

  • @MaraK_dialmformara
    @MaraK_dialmformara 5 лет назад +14

    This is wonderful. If you want to learn more about the histories of pigments, I recommend The Secret Lives of Colour by Kassia St. Clair.

  • @Prawnsly
    @Prawnsly 3 года назад +2

    Something about this whole collection is really inspiring

  • @radianzero
    @radianzero 5 лет назад +36

    "Lead white is toxic in the same way that lead is... toxic"
    Me: *_"Well yes, but actually _**_-no-_**_ yes."_*

    • @emmastilwell759
      @emmastilwell759 5 лет назад

      Willing to explain? Now I'm really curious :)

  • @jojack4211
    @jojack4211 2 года назад +1

    I’m American and I still spell ‘color’ as colour, it just feels right.

  • @arothmanmusic
    @arothmanmusic 5 лет назад +3

    I highly recommend “The Secret Lives of Color” by Kassia St. Clair. It talks all about the history and invention of pigments like these. It’s really fascinating.

  • @Sp00kq
    @Sp00kq 3 года назад +1

    Each day I discover a new older Tom Scott video I haven't seen scrolling through his channel

  • @Screamo_RC
    @Screamo_RC Год назад +4

    I somehow forget these pigments have to be made by things, they don't just happen. How amazing.

  • @mcbrite
    @mcbrite Год назад +1

    Even on my shitty monitor, those colors look amazing! Would love a tour there!

  • @anotheraccount7637
    @anotheraccount7637 5 лет назад +21

    What do you do for a living?
    I feed cows mango leaves them collect the urine.

  • @leonarodoaviation
    @leonarodoaviation Год назад +2

    The colors inside the 120 Crayon Box:

  • @ketsuekikumori9145
    @ketsuekikumori9145 5 лет назад +8

    How very colourful. (Also love how autocorrect highlights colour as incorrect)

    • @joshuaclare4860
      @joshuaclare4860 5 лет назад +6

      Ketsueki Kumori the autocorrect occurs because it defaults to the American spelling of the English words. So colour becomes color, armour becomes armor, and so on. Quite frankly it’s rather aggravating

    • @Hannah_Em
      @Hannah_Em 5 лет назад +5

      Honestly, you can't trust the Americans to build anything properly! ;D

    • @ginismoja2459
      @ginismoja2459 5 лет назад +5

      Just change your autocorrect language to literally any variety of English but American. Colour is the correct spelling everywhere else.

    • @andymcl92
      @andymcl92 5 лет назад

      @@ginismoja2459 *any variety of English but Simplified.

    • @cityuser
      @cityuser 5 лет назад +2

      @@Hannah_Em Just look at 9/1... maybe too inappropriate of a joke.

  • @nope_118
    @nope_118 2 года назад +1

    I love that someone put star stickers on the jars, that's just so sweet :)

  • @mjmdiver1137
    @mjmdiver1137 4 года назад +5

    Tom, if you haven't, you should do an episode on how/why magenta isn't a 'real' color... Its a fascinating perspective on color theory;

  • @verynormalvic
    @verynormalvic Год назад

    Thank you for coming to our city! I hope you enjoyed exploring the Harvard Art Museum and the other museums in the area, artistic and scientific.

  • @TheKazragore
    @TheKazragore 5 лет назад +9

    Just waiting for someone to discover ocatrine.

  • @alexamg6675
    @alexamg6675 3 года назад

    Those purples were so nice

  • @cjsimmons6535
    @cjsimmons6535 5 лет назад +10

    The mummy brown is creepy though

  • @twothreebravo
    @twothreebravo 5 лет назад

    I love that this isn't just a static display but is used in research and reference. I might have to head out to see this museum one of these days now that I'm back in Massachusetts

  • @CatsMeowPaw
    @CatsMeowPaw 5 лет назад +3

    This was a nice colour piece about Harvard