Hi, Sue! Thanks so much for swatching out these burnt siennas. I always find swatching videos helpful since I can compare and contrast different paints.
This also showed the difference in rewetting. The Daniel Smith and Schmincke appeared to rewet so much more easily. Thanks for the video, it was very informative.
I'm quite new to art and watercolour ( 67 years young! ... Have I left it too late for all my masterpieces? ) Great help to see what these manufacturers produce and how they dry, particularly their granulations. Thanks for sharing
Fascinating, thanks Sue. I love a good paint smack down! I've got most of these brands in this colour and I often go to the Maimeri, probably because Sienna is in Italy. Not surprised to see the Daniel Smith showing off.
Thank you for this comparison. Sadly I can't get around the DS version and its quite expensive here in europe :( I tried so many other brands but they all are much more on the orange side
Hi. Thank you. Have you tried the Schminke one? Otherwise, you could use a more orange one and add a TINY amount of ultramarine blue to make it browner?
@@Rococco1000 I dont use the Schmincke since it has black in it. But yes mixing with ultramarine is an option. I probably will try their french ult. because I like to have a granulating brown
Hi, Sue. Thanks for your video. Your chart has WN Raw Sienna under PBr 7, and you mention that PBr7 is the pigment that is 'burnt' to produce Burnt Sienna. But, My tube of WN Raw Sienna says PY42 + PR101 (yellow ochre and red iron oxide), and I'm curious if your tube says PBr7? Maybe WN changed their formulation of that paint?
I personally hate this name nonsense; burnt sienna is made from PBr7. Anything else should be called burnt sienna "hue" imo. Also I really don't understand why a producer would want to imitate burnt sienna, which is a cheap, and very good, lightfast pigment with some kind of multi pigment formulation.
Thank you. No, some are PR101 (transparent red oxide). Some are a mixture of both. It will say on the label or the websites. I have just posted a video about paint labels and properties of watercolour paints which I hope is helpful.
It’s lovely to see Daler Rowney in a review/comparison video. The company has been in business since 1783 and I love they’re paints. 🤗🇬🇧
Hi, Sue! Thanks so much for swatching out these burnt siennas. I always find swatching videos helpful since I can compare and contrast different paints.
This also showed the difference in rewetting. The Daniel Smith and Schmincke appeared to rewet so much more easily. Thanks for the video, it was very informative.
Yes, some definitely a bit more difficult to rewet.
I'm quite new to art and watercolour ( 67 years young! ... Have I left it too late for all my masterpieces? ) Great help to see what these manufacturers produce and how they dry, particularly their granulations. Thanks for sharing
Hi Rob. Absolutely not. Most people in my classes started after retirement!
Thanks for subscribing. Sue.
It’s never too late to paint!
Fascinating, thanks Sue. I love a good paint smack down! I've got most of these brands in this colour and I often go to the Maimeri, probably because Sienna is in Italy. Not surprised to see the Daniel Smith showing off.
Thank you for your comparison video. It's helpful.
Thank you for this comparison. Sadly I can't get around the DS version and its quite expensive here in europe :( I tried so many other brands but they all are much more on the orange side
Hi. Thank you. Have you tried the Schminke one? Otherwise, you could use a more orange one and add a TINY amount of ultramarine blue to make it browner?
@@Rococco1000 I dont use the Schmincke since it has black in it. But yes mixing with ultramarine is an option. I probably will try their french ult. because I like to have a granulating brown
Hi, Sue. Thanks for your video. Your chart has WN Raw Sienna under PBr 7, and you mention that PBr7 is the pigment that is 'burnt' to produce Burnt Sienna. But, My tube of WN Raw Sienna says PY42 + PR101 (yellow ochre and red iron oxide), and I'm curious if your tube says PBr7? Maybe WN changed their formulation of that paint?
Hi Wendy. I think I mentioned at the beginning that some are made from PBr101 or a mixture? I will check my W&N tube to make sure! Thank you.
I personally hate this name nonsense; burnt sienna is made from PBr7. Anything else should be called burnt sienna "hue" imo.
Also I really don't understand why a producer would want to imitate burnt sienna, which is a cheap, and very good, lightfast pigment with some kind of multi pigment formulation.
Thank you! Very informational. Are they all PBr 7? Even the more brownish one like Daniel Smith?
Thank you. No, some are PR101 (transparent red oxide). Some are a mixture of both. It will say on the label or the websites. I have just posted a video about paint labels and properties of watercolour paints which I hope is helpful.
from your personal experience do you have a preference between the daler rowney/winsor student vs professional?