Chromatic Black from Gamlin is very expensive. Your videos are practical and give valuable information. Camlin should consider bringing out new premium quality artist oil colours in 200 ml tubes, in just 24 odd colours.
Thank you very much! All we need are single pigments with high concentration. But businesses go with numbers only. Focus is on watercolors globally! :)
Good video on the blacks! I didn't care much for black paint in oils but, recently, I bought two blacks from Rublev by Natural Pigments: Natural Black Oxide and Roman Black. One darker and neutral, much like a Mars Black but with a different consistency, other more transparent and warm, great for mixing. Being oxides, both dry relatively quickly. Very good paints without additives or fillers. Unfortunately, that paint brand is too expensive for me and they come only in 50ml tubes. From them, I only have those two blacks, two whites (Titanium White, pure, without zinc oxide, extremely powerful, and with a consistency very different from the other brands, sometimes not in a good way, stringy) Lithopone, a more transparent white, that I use for mixing) and one earth tone, the less expensive type of pigment: Venetian Red. Some of the other colors are very expensive and some are toxic. They don't sell over retailers. Out of America they only have, I think, one business that sells their products in UK and one european website that sells from Germany.
@@lophoflora Rublev has done a lot of innovation in-terms of paint making. I'd love to have one of their stack lead whites. Factory made leads aren't that great.
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Chromatic Black from Gamlin is very expensive. Your videos are practical and give valuable information.
Camlin should consider bringing out new premium quality artist oil colours in 200 ml tubes, in just 24 odd colours.
Thank you very much! All we need are single pigments with high concentration. But businesses go with numbers only. Focus is on watercolors globally! :)
Good video on the blacks!
I didn't care much for black paint in oils but, recently, I bought two blacks from Rublev by Natural Pigments: Natural Black Oxide and Roman Black. One darker and neutral, much like a Mars Black but with a different consistency, other more transparent and warm, great for mixing. Being oxides, both dry relatively quickly. Very good paints without additives or fillers. Unfortunately, that paint brand is too expensive for me and they come only in 50ml tubes. From them, I only have those two blacks, two whites (Titanium White, pure, without zinc oxide, extremely powerful, and with a consistency very different from the other brands, sometimes not in a good way, stringy) Lithopone, a more transparent white, that I use for mixing) and one earth tone, the less expensive type of pigment: Venetian Red. Some of the other colors are very expensive and some are toxic. They don't sell over retailers. Out of America they only have, I think, one business that sells their products in UK and one european website that sells from Germany.
@@lophoflora Rublev has done a lot of innovation in-terms of paint making. I'd love to have one of their stack lead whites. Factory made leads aren't that great.
i heard ivory black have weaker paint film if used straight from the tube
Not true. One of the oldest pigments. Modern ivory black is not made from charred bones but carbon black so extremely stable
i see i just saw it on tiktok videos