Thanks so much for the encouraging comments Jill! I'm glad you'll give it a try. You really get to know the pigment's characteristics with these...and it's really fun!
Thanks! What hue is the titanium grey in reality? It looks quite a warm neutral green on my screen, like my Cotman raw umber(great for limestone/rocks), but I know screens skew colour a lot.
thanks for watching! Grey Titanium is a neutral soft grey with some opacity...it's literally titanium oxide that hasn't had other white colorants like zinc or chalk added. It's best for a base layer as it's semi-transparent and won't glaze well. I hope that helps!
This shows how quality sample cards should be done. 🎉 I need to go back and do this for my colors. ❤️
Thanks so much for the encouraging comments Jill! I'm glad you'll give it a try. You really get to know the pigment's characteristics with these...and it's really fun!
So informative.
Thank you! I'm glad the info was helpful. :)
Thank you- fascinating!
Thankyou Susan, I'm glad you found the info helpful.
Very good explanation.
I'm glad it was helpful :)
@@JillWilliamsWatercolor thank you from Brazil ❤️🌹
Thanks! What hue is the titanium grey in reality? It looks quite a warm neutral green on my screen, like my Cotman raw umber(great for limestone/rocks), but I know screens skew colour a lot.
thanks for watching! Grey Titanium is a neutral soft grey with some opacity...it's literally titanium oxide that hasn't had other white colorants like zinc or chalk added. It's best for a base layer as it's semi-transparent and won't glaze well. I hope that helps!
excellent,,ut try to end with the samples when fully dry as that do change a lot. thank you
I'm glad the info was helpful :)