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Pure white, semi-opaque in relation to titanium white. Ideal for lightening multicoloured shades.
Pure, brilliant white. Possesses the highest opacity and tinting power of allwhite colours.
Titanium white with ultrafine primary grain, providing a semi-transparent effect.Forms fine white haze effects which display a milky blue shimmer in glancinglight. An ideal colour to create atmospheric perspectives.
Warm, reddish flesh tone. Ideal base for mixing other flesh tones.
Pale, greenish, opaque yellow which imitates the original with inorganic pigments. Medieval yellow was the brightest yellow used by theMedieval painters.
Light, delicate greenish yellow which can hardly be obtained by mixing, made from inorganic pigments.
Imitation of cadmium yellow with inorganic pigment. High tinting power, semi-opaque, cadmium-free.
The classic brilliant, green-tinged yellow in oil colouring. Mixes well with translucent cyan; produces clear, semi-transparent green shades.
Contains a modern, opaque pigment with high tinting power. Produces a brilliant, slightly green-tinted yellow. A cadmiumfree alternative to cadmium yellow. Mixes well with translucent cyan, produces clear, brilliant, opaque green shades.
Contains a modern, opaque pigment with high tinting power. Produces a reddish, slightly dull yellow. A chrome-free alternative to medium chrome yellow.
In former times, Indian yellow was produced in India from the urine of cows which were fed with mango leaves. This method of production is prohibited today, because it is cruel. Our Indian yellow is an imitation of the classic translucent orange-yellow colour.
Traditional colour produced from inorganic pigments. Very light, almost beige yellow.
Brilliant opaque yellow with high tinting power.
Rich, red-tinted yellow with good opacity and tinting power.
Brilliant yellow-orange with high opacity and tinting power
Brilliant orange with high opacity and tinting power.
The lighter and yellow variant of dark Naples yellow.
Warm, opaque, almost ochre-coloured yellow. Previously produced from toxic lead pigment, now an imitation with inorganic, highly lightfast pigments.
Inorganic yellow which produces a very fine glaze effect; the tone is roughly similar to a brilliant yellow ochre or a very yellow Sienna.
Warm, finely translucent brownish orange.
Lemon yellow when applied in a thin layer to produce a fine glaze. Dark, almost ochre- coloured yellow when applied as an opaque layer.
Finely translucent dark orange shade with pronounced red tinge. Ideal for mixing to produce very light red shades.
Imitation of the toxic chrome orange with a non-toxic, modern, opaque organic pigment with high tinting power. A very deep, brilliantly fiery orange.
In former times, scarlet was a much sought-after colour which was obtained from a coccid which lives in the lermes oak. Today, the name “scarlet” is givento a brilliant red with a very pronounced yellow tinge.
Rich opaque red with high tinting power. Darker and bluer than light cadmium red.
Imitation of cadmium red middle with organic pigments. High tinting power, opaque, cadmium-free.
Finely translucent dark, brownish red. Comparable with very red mahogany.
Translucent, very bright deep red. With the exception of “Alizarin madder lake”, our MUSSINI® “madder” colours are standard tone designations. They are simulated today with highly light-fast, translucent, modern organic pigments.
Brilliant dark red with a blue tinge. Lighter than alizarin madder lake, produces a good glaze effect.
Cold, rich dark red, produces good glaze effects. Originally an alumina-based colour from alizarin, the main dyestuff contained in the madder plant. Since 1870, alizarin has been obtained and processed into colour by synthetic means.
Perylenes are among the most light-fast organic pigments. A translucent, cold, dark red with a slight brown tint. Florentine red is based on the old Florentine colour which was obtained from Brazil wood and was similar in colour.
Pure opaque red with high tinting power. Similar to vermilion red.
Very deep red with a blue tinge. High opacity and tinting power.
A standard tone designation, derived directly from the Latin name for the cocchineal louse. Brilliant red with blue tinge, semi-translucent.
Corresponds to the basic colour magenta in subtractive colour mixture, produces a very good glaze effect. Produces brilliant, translucen tviolet shades when mixed with translucent cyan.
Classic red. As real cinnabar is toxic and possesses poor light-fastness, this colour has been imitated with a modern, organic pigment. Brilliant, opaque red, bluer than scarlet, yellower than carmine.
Warm, finely translucent reddish brown, commonly used today to imitate burnt Sienna.
Finely translucent colour, bluer than magenta. In ancient times, purple was obtained by means of a complicated process from the gland of a snail, and was much sought-after as a particularly valuable dye for artists’ colours.
Very finely translucent, brilliant bluish violet with particularly high tinting power.
Semi-opaque cobalt blue shade with a greenish tendency.
Corresponds to the basic colour cyan in the subtractive colour mixture; very good glaze effect. Produces brilliant, translucent violet shades when mixed with magenta and brilliant, semi-translucent green shades when mixed with lemon yellow.
Deep blue with very high tinting power. This colour used to be obtained from the indigo plant or woad; today, indigo is produced by synthetic means.
Imitation of deep cobalt blue with ultramarine. Opaque, with high tinting power, slightly greener and duller.
Semi-opaque, clear blue with a slight red tinge.
Semi-opaque blue with a subtle red tinge. Genuine cobalt blue was discoveredin the 18th century, and was first used in colouring at the beginning of the 19th century. With cobalt blue, it was now possible to colour a radiant blue sky.
Very pure violet with a reddish tinge.
The classical royal blue was introduced under King Louis XIV of France, based on a cobalt pigment. The king’s blue was light, corresponding roughly to a green-tinged sky blue, similar to our royal blue light.
The possibility of producing ultramarine synthetically led to an increasein variations of the royal blue colour. Deep royal blue is a brilliant medium blue produced with ultramarine.
Brilliant, semi-translucent blue with a turquoise tinge. An imitation of toxic manganese blue using the non-toxic organic phthalocyanine pigments.
Traditional colour. Black blue with very high tinting power. Its real shade is only revealed in glazes. Has a tendency towards bronzing on account of its high pigmentation.
Lighter than dark ultramarine and with a slightly less pronounced red tinge.
Finely translucent, very pure blue with a red tinge. In the Middle Ages, ultramarine was obtained from the semi-precious stone lapis lazuli. Not until the first third of the 19th century was it possible to produce ultramarine by synthetic means.
Finely translucent dark blue shade with a red tinge.
Imitation of indigo with very high tinting power and improved lightfastness. Also comparable to midnight blue on account of its depth of colour.
Dark black blue which retains its blue character. Often appears in Byzantine frescos. In former times it was obtained primarily from azurite and a small fraction of coal. Composition of modern, light-fast pigments.
Finely translucent, brilliant deep blue, the phthalocyanine pigment with the most pronounced red tint. These pigments were discovered in the 1920s and are now one of the most important and most stable organic pigments.
Very finely translucent, brilliant turquoise blue; the phthalocyanine pigment with the most pronounced green tinge.
Opaque, highly light-fast turquoise with high tinting power and extreme brilliance of colour.
Opaque, light and pure green with very high tinting power; lighter and markedly yellower variant of dark chrome green.
Opaque, deep and pure bluish green with very high tinting power. Formerly produced from chrome yellow and Berlin blue, now imitated with non-toxic pigments.
Fiery, semi-translucent green with a blue tinge, also commonly referred to as emerald green. This colour has been available to artists since the mid-19thcentury, when it replaced the copper colours which were toxic at the time.
Dull, olive-tinged, highly stable green, with high tinting power and opacity.
Finely translucent, brilliant, blue-tinged, rich green which cannot be produced by mixing.
Lighter variation with a more pronounced yellow tinge than dark helio translucent green.
Dark green with good glaze effect. Similar to Dutch pink, which was obtained from the unripe berries of the milkwort.
Brilliant light green with high opacity, produced from two “pure” pigments.
Semi-translucent, gentle, yellow-tinged green, very similar to the “original” Schweinfurt green. Schweinfurt green was an important artists’ colour in the19th century, but was highly toxic on account of its arsenic content.
Light yellowish green with high opacity.
Golden-toned in glazes, like a light, yellowish sap green in full tone.
Opaque pure medium green with high tinting power.
Dark, rich bluish green, similar to the semi-precious stone tourmaline, whose shades range from yellowish green and olive green to bluish green.
Imitation of the prime Terra Verde earths from Baldo near Verona, which are nolonger available. Ideal for producing the “Verdaccio” effect, the green priming coat applied to the main areas in portrait colouring.
Imitation of the particularly brilliant Sienna earths, which are virtually unobtainable today, with selected ferrous oxides.
Highly stable pigments are used to imitate the asphalt colour which was wide spreadin the 19th century, a translucent, deep brown of low stability which was able to show through the colour layers.
Natural earth with a highly pronounced brown tinge, low tinting power. Results from the weathering of magnesium-iron-silicates.
This warm, brownish red was found on the mural colourings in Pompeii. It is darker than Terra Pozzuoli.
Violet-tinged dark reddish brown with high opacity and tinting power. Its name isderived from the field of alchemy and means “death’s head”, as this colour was obtained from iron salts which were baked down to their “dying” embers.
Generic name for light iron oxide reds, brownish red with high opacity and tinting power.
Dark, warm, red-tinged ochre pigmented with a natural earth from Germany.
Imitation of the ochre which was much sought-after in ancient times, using modern ferrous oxides. Semi-opaque to semi-translucent. Fiery golden yellow in glazes.
Semi-translucent to semi-opaque ochre yellow pigmented with a natural earth from Germany.
Dark reddish brown, semi-translucent to semi-opaque, pigmented with a burnt natural earth.
Stil de grain was formerly obtained from the dyestuff contained in the semi-ripe berries of the milkwort – a warm translucent tone.
Imitation of the famous natural earths from Italy, which are barely obtainable today. Its name relates to the place where it was formerly found at the foot of Vesuvius. Slightly lighter and yellower than Pompeiian red, with high opacity and tinting power.
Mixture of natural earths and organic pigments. Semi-translucent,dark, olive-tinged brown.
Pigmented with a natural earth. When burned, the umbers lose water of crystallisation and their grain size increases. This results in increased opacity and a shiftin the shade towards a deep reddish brown with high tinting power.
Imitation of the colour which was formerly obtained from fine-washed browncoal, using highly stable pigments. The original colour was similarly unstable to asphalt. A translucent, deep blackish brown.
Dark, finely translucent reddish brown with high tinting power, more fiery than Vandyke brown.
Pigmented with a natural earth. Very fiery and yellow-tinged when used for glazing.
Opaque, pure dark brown with high opacity and tinting power, lighterand purer than a burnt umber.
Modern organic black pigment. Very deep in full tone, close to a Russian green inglazes. Produces green-tinged grey tones when mixed with white. Atrament was the name for a very cold black in Roman times.
Traditional deep black, opaque and lightfast. Formerly obtained from charred ivory pieces, now produced via the dry distillation of degreased bones.
Particularly fine gas black with maximum depth of colour.This provides for high intensity and tinting power.
Traditional Schmincke grey colour. Very similar to a dark neutral grey.
“Cool”, inorganic black with a gentle tinge of charcoal. Produces ablue-tinged grey when mixed with white.
Light stone grey, a “neutral” grey for the beholder.
Opaque bluish grey, similar to slate grey.
Opaque grey with delicate red tinge, without black pigments.
Semi-opaque grey with green tinge, without black pigment.
Greenish, semi-transparent grey. Specially developed to produce the Italian masters’ famous “sfumato” – a fine grey mist which was applied to portraits, for example, in order to lend them a softer look.
Pleasant, warm dark grey with a “hint” of violet.
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