Close shade of natural indigo.
Active filters
Magnificent blue with an underlying shade of mauve. Very useful for composing magnificent mauves, especially with quinacridones like Isaro pink for example.
With black or burnt sienna, it makes it possible to obtain very beautiful Payne grays and with burnt umber to create a beautiful indigo.
Dark and warm brown. Interesting color for dark your shades.
Very beautiful earth turning red. This color is, in my opinion, essential on the palette as it is rich in mixture. With blues, for example, burnt Sienna is a nice range of grays. With the reds, she creates "brick red" colors.
Beautiful earthy yellow.
Earthy orange but nevertheless bright.
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.
Very beautiful yellow, earthy and bright. Very useful on the palette.
Very good brick red tone, with an underlying pink shade. Despite its relative opacity, this well-mastered color is appreciated by watercolorists.
Very beautiful brick red, with an underlying shade of orange-yellow.
Very beautiful brown, slightly red. For watercolorists looking for uniform washes, March Brown may be preferred over natural soils.