Very good brick red tone, with an underlying pink shade. Despite its relative opacity, this well-mastered color is appreciated by watercolorists.
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Dark brown tending to mauve. It can also be easily obtained on the palette by mixing smoke black with mauve iron oxide. To work on its shade, you can add mauve iron oxide to it. By combining it with yellow ocher or natural Siena earth you get sepia brown.
Gorgeous unique shade of gray blue.
Very beautiful very dark brown, almost black. Very useful for contrasts. Can be obtained on the palette by mixing smoke black with mauve iron oxide and ocher or natural Sienna.
Very nice cold, deep gray, turning blue. Useful as a contrast color.
Very beautiful brown, slightly red. For watercolorists looking for uniform washes, March Brown may be preferred over natural soils.
This black can be useful for certain mixtures. For example, by combining it with ultramarine blue to obtain Payne gray or mauve iron oxide or Venice red to obtain Van Dijck brown, if we add a little ocher we obtain the sepia color.
Close shade of natural indigo.
Very beautiful brick red, with an underlying shade of orange-yellow.
This red has a great purity of tone. It draws very slightly on the yellow.
Very beautiful dark red tending to burgundy.
Un bleu à la teinte unique et légèrement iridescent. Il ravira les aquarellistes qui apprécient les effets et la granulation.