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- Mono-pigmented:: Yes
Magnificent yellow-orange very bright and a beautiful purity of tone.
Its more marked opacity than organic yellows (Isaro Yellow light, dark and Indian) can hold back its use, however well mastered it is quite magnificent. It is undeniably one of the colors in my range that appeals to the majority of watercolorists.
Warm yellow with a shade close to dark cadmium yellow. With a beautiful transparency, this yellow allows you to obtain a very beautiful range of greens with Prussian blue and Phthalo blue for example. With yellow phthalo green (PG36) it allows you to easily compose the shades "bladder green" and "Hoocker green"
Bright yellow with great purity of tone.
Magnificent pale yellow with underlying shade of green, very bright and bright yellow.
Pale yellow with a slightly darker shade than lemon cadmium yellow. Luminous and bright yellow. Useful as primary yellow. It is one of the essential colors on the palette of a watercolorist.
A very essential greenish yellow. It allows a wide range of rich and surprising mixes.
A very soft, slightly pastel yellow.
Very beautiful yellow, earthy and bright. Very useful on the palette.
Very interesting Color to create "pastel" touch by mixing with other colors.
Very beautiful brown with a green shade that characterizes real natural shade earth. I draw attention to the fact that this gray earth is naturally very little coloring.
Beautiful earthy yellow.
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.
Very beautiful brick red, with an underlying shade of orange-yellow.
Dark and warm brown. Interesting color for dark your shades.
Very good brick red tone, with an underlying pink shade. Despite its relative opacity, this well-mastered color is appreciated by watercolorists.
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.