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Very beautiful blue with a shade having an underlying green tone. Very bright and frank.
With phthalo green it forms very beautiful turquoise. With the yellows of the beautiful greens. With the ocher of the more muted greens and with the pink or the purple Isaro a beautiful range of mauves.
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.
Real cobalt blue with a great purity of tone. Bright and close to primary blue. We can define it as the most blue of blues because it does not draw on green (like Prussian blue) or red (like overseas).
Close shade of natural indigo.
Dark blue with an underlying green hue. This blue is very useful for creating greens, it is actually the blue of greens.
It is a dark blue, which corresponds to a dark reddish blue. It is ideal for nuancing cool colors like violets and blues by giving them more depth. Also useful for forming greens, especially with chartreuse yellow.
Very beautiful light blue, which pulls slightly towards green. Particularly suitable for working the sky.
Earthy orange but nevertheless bright.
Bright orange. This color is monopigmentary which gives it a very beautiful purity of tone. Due to its greater transparency, pyrrole orange may be preferred.
Mono pigment orange which therefore does not result from a mixture of yellow and red which gives it a more excellent purity of tone.
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.