Color and Technique Newsletter No. 3
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manufacturers are encouraging painters to follow what are at best dubious techniques. Of course you can ‘stir’ water soluble oils, acrylics and watercolor paints together* but will they stand the test of even a short time? (20yrs?) (* You can also stir sand and butter together!!
Color mixing
Q. I have your color mixing swatch book and I am trying to produce a color called W***** Violet which I use in flower painting. (In watercolor). It’s very clean and transparent. I have mixed Quinacridone Violet with Ultramarine in varying degrees but seem unable to reproduce the very light shade. Can you help please.

A. You will not be able to exactly match W***** Violet using Quinacridone Violet and Ultramarine Blue. However, you will be very close and, most importantly, you will have mixes which are reliable. Unless changes have been made recently, the pigment used in W***** Violet (watercolor), is PV23BS/RS. This gives a very clear and bright violet – for a time. It is known throughout the art materials trade to be a pigment which fades very rapidly when exposed to light. The ASTM, an official body, rated it to be unsuitable for artist quality paints. As with many other very bright colorants used by artists, temporary brightness has to
be weighed against future fading. However, it could well be that the company have changed the formula. If this is so, and if you wish me to look into the situation for you, please send me the information that you find on the tube.

Q. The information on the tube reads:- Carbazole Dioxazine PV 23. I hope this is sufficient for your needs
A. There are two basic types of PV23, one leans towards red (PV23RS) and the other towards blue (PV23BS). The PV23RS, when used in a watercolor paint tested ASTM 111 ‘Not sufficiently light fast to be used in artist quality paints – can fade rather badly, particularly the tints’. PV23BS, as a watercolor paint was rated even lower, ASTM 1V ‘Pigments falling into this category will fade rapidly’.
Complementaries
Q. Am I correct in understanding that when trying to structure a painting on a complementary color scheme, while it is useful to know the exact mixing partner, one can also feel free to use the neighboring hue as well
A. An understanding of color will allow flexibility in its use. It should never be seen as a set of ‘rules’. The close complementary pair orange-red and blue-green (above), can be darkened by each other (whilst retaining their characters), and will enhance each other visually. However:
there is no reason why one should not move to either side of each color. In the example shown above the orange-red has been exchanged for a violet-red. They will not retain their character so accurately when darkened but they will offer some interesting visual arrangements.
Alternatively the more general pair, orange-red and mid-green can be employed.