I love supergranulating colours from Schmincke. I have the whole set of all of them (excluding urban) in half pans and many more in individual tubes. Obviousely I have all their single pigments in tubes!❤
PY159 is also sold as a single pigment watercolor paint from Winsor and Newton. They call it Lemon Yellow Deep and it also granulates. Turner's Mars Black (PBk11) is intensely granulating.
W+n y159 is a few degrees cooler than the schmincke y159, but contains much less binder. The binder in the schmincke separates in a not very pleasant way.
Schminke really has it going on! I make my own paints and I have tried many binder formulas, out of curiosity, Schminke has theee best watercolour binder by far. I really have to get a set of the super granulation.
I totally agree with You. I don’t see a point to buy expensive multiple pigments paint (like super granulating ones from Schminke), when I can buy used pigments and mix it by my own. And I have more options because I can change the ratio of pigments or like You suggest mix only few of them together. So I buy mono-pigment paints and break this rules only for not expensive ones (for example buying local paints).
I would love this color for nature, such as fog, moss, lichen, pebbles, seashells, distant mountains, and even stormy skies. It also has a very vintage nostalgia feel to me. Mementos in the attic such as ribbon or upholstery, old faded vacation photos, vintage kitchens, worn wallpaper, etc. I can absolutely see it used for urban things that are typically more grey, such as metal, stone, or concrete. Also historic military subjects. I love this color, but don't plan to use it because cobalt is not earth friendly. Hopefully I can come up with an alternate. :)
Yes, if you can come up with a pigment or pigments that look like the cobalt turquoise, this hue is amazing. All the things you named would be perfect for this color!
PY159= Winsor Newton Lemon Yellow Deep AND PY159 Renesans Intense-it’s a much warmer hue I’ve been experimenting with PY159 for about 3 years, after seeing it in so many of the SGran… Winsor Newton has little to no granulation; HOWEVER, after I ran out of my tube of volcano yellow-I started playing, trying to get the same effect, mixing Winsor Newton & Renesans, 2:1. There really is SO many cool mixes because of the larger particle size-(I need to check, I think it was Amethyst, a dab of PV23 + PY159. You get granular, separation and just a bit of shimmer -shades of dark purple/dusky violet/gray/yellow-gray). I have several pages of JUST mixes with PY159. OH-also, if you’re working with volcano yellow, I’m sure you know it can be harder to wet down..and it can actually affect the mixing-out of the tube it has a higher tinting ability than from the pan unless it’s been sitting & rewet awhile. The Winsor Newton and Renesans don’t have this issue. As much as I love doing mixing charts, seeing the often breathtaking results, and even mulling my own paints and mixes; my style of painting doesn’t have a lot of “give” for the unpredictability. My daughter and I used that dusky violet above in an urban painting we attempted to do. 😂🤷🏼♀️. We’re both just self-taught although my best friend IS a retired art professor, most of her work was in oils, pastels and inks. I’m retired, legally blind (and getting worse, unfortunately), physically challenged healthcare professional and microbiologist. No art..and boy do I regret it now. 😂. That’s OK..Liz floods me with books, lots of advice for me and my daughter..and even an occasional slumber party..or as her wonderful hubby of 48yrs calls us “crazy old American hippies” 😁. Ok…I need to go swatch my new paints
Ugghh..my response disappeared, I’ll try again without naming the site where you can get handcrafted items, starts with an e and ends with a y. 😂 alittlecreativeme is Aprils store. They start under 10 for 15ml tubes. Just fyi: tubes and pans by Renesans can have very different mixes and even different hues of the single pigment paints. Go by her swatches, not other’s reviews like I did…I glanced at the swatch, thought it looked really close to the pan I’d seen in a review; received it and it was a totally different PR108 than I needed. Still beautiful though, so, I wasn’t too upset. 😂. I think I have about 8 of them now, including the PY159. April is also great about responding to answer any questions you might have
PB36 is cobalt chromium oxide and like most cobalts you will find it in different hues even among the same brand. Thanks for sharing this. I love color mixing videos. Winser and Newton has a PY159 but I don't believe it's granulating.
Yes definitely interested in the differences of pigments between brands
👍🏻 it will be coming.
The separation in the dish looks like art too♥️
Doesn’t it!? I love the art that appears in the palette. I am always taking palette pictures.
I love supergranulating colours from Schmincke. I have the whole set of all of them (excluding urban) in half pans and many more in individual tubes. Obviousely I have all their single pigments in tubes!❤
I have all the granulating sets in half pans and got the haze set in the 15ml tubes!
PY159 is also sold as a single pigment watercolor paint from Winsor and Newton. They call it Lemon Yellow Deep and it also granulates. Turner's Mars Black (PBk11) is intensely granulating.
I will have to take a look at the mars black from Turner. I will be checking out the Lemon Yellow Deep. Thanks
W+n y159 is a few degrees cooler than the schmincke y159, but contains much less binder. The binder in the schmincke separates in a not very pleasant way.
Schminke really has it going on! I make my own paints and I have tried many binder formulas, out of curiosity, Schminke has theee best watercolour binder by far. I really have to get a set of the super granulation.
They are some petty amazing colors.
WN makes Lemon Yellow Deep, which is just PY159.
You can also get it from Kremer in Germany, or Kusakabe in Japan.
Oh thank you for sharing that! I will look at the Winsor & Newton colors.
I totally agree with You. I don’t see a point to buy expensive multiple pigments paint (like super granulating ones from Schminke), when I can buy used pigments and mix it by my own. And I have more options because I can change the ratio of pigments or like You suggest mix only few of them together. So I buy mono-pigment paints and break this rules only for not expensive ones (for example buying local paints).
…and if you enjoy mixing paints it can definitely be the way to go. I love mixing and the challenge of learning the mix.
I would love this color for nature, such as fog, moss, lichen, pebbles, seashells, distant mountains, and even stormy skies. It also has a very vintage nostalgia feel to me. Mementos in the attic such as ribbon or upholstery, old faded vacation photos, vintage kitchens, worn wallpaper, etc. I can absolutely see it used for urban things that are typically more grey, such as metal, stone, or concrete. Also historic military subjects.
I love this color, but don't plan to use it because cobalt is not earth friendly. Hopefully I can come up with an alternate. :)
Yes, if you can come up with a pigment or pigments that look like the cobalt turquoise, this hue is amazing. All the things you named would be perfect for this color!
@@ClarkFineArt I forgot succulents! This hue practically begs to be a cactus, lol.
@@wildflower1397 Yes! I bet it would make a beautiful succulent!
Love that you show how to make super granulating colors!!! Just subscribed!! ❤❤
Welcome, glad you have found the channel.
PY159= Winsor Newton Lemon Yellow Deep
AND PY159 Renesans Intense-it’s a much warmer hue
I’ve been experimenting with PY159 for about 3 years, after seeing it in so many of the SGran…
Winsor Newton has little to no granulation; HOWEVER, after I ran out of my tube of volcano yellow-I started playing, trying to get the same effect, mixing Winsor Newton & Renesans, 2:1.
There really is SO many cool mixes because of the larger particle size-(I need to check, I think it was Amethyst, a dab of PV23 + PY159. You get granular, separation and just a bit of shimmer
-shades of dark purple/dusky violet/gray/yellow-gray). I have several pages of JUST mixes with PY159. OH-also, if you’re working with volcano yellow, I’m sure you know it can be harder to wet down..and it can actually affect the mixing-out of the tube it has a higher tinting ability than from the pan unless it’s been sitting & rewet awhile. The Winsor Newton and Renesans don’t have this issue.
As much as I love doing mixing charts, seeing the often breathtaking results, and even mulling my own paints and mixes; my style of painting doesn’t have a lot of “give” for the unpredictability. My daughter and I used that dusky violet above in an urban painting we attempted to do. 😂🤷🏼♀️. We’re both just self-taught although my best friend IS a retired art professor, most of her work was in oils, pastels and inks. I’m retired, legally blind (and getting worse, unfortunately), physically challenged healthcare professional and microbiologist. No art..and boy do I regret it now. 😂. That’s OK..Liz floods me with books, lots of advice for me and my daughter..and even an occasional slumber party..or as her wonderful hubby of 48yrs calls us “crazy old American hippies” 😁.
Ok…I need to go swatch my new paints
Oh interesting. Unfortunately it doesn't seem Renesans paints are too easy to come by. It would be interesting to have a look at their PY159
Ugghh..my response disappeared, I’ll try again without naming the site where you can get handcrafted items, starts with an e and ends with a y. 😂 alittlecreativeme is Aprils store. They start under 10 for 15ml tubes. Just fyi: tubes and pans by Renesans can have very different mixes and even different hues of the single pigment paints. Go by her swatches, not other’s reviews like I did…I glanced at the swatch, thought it looked really close to the pan I’d seen in a review; received it and it was a totally different PR108 than I needed. Still beautiful though, so, I wasn’t too upset. 😂. I think I have about 8 of them now, including the PY159. April is also great about responding to answer any questions you might have
Very informative
Thanks
PB36 is cobalt chromium oxide and like most cobalts you will find it in different hues even among the same brand. Thanks for sharing this. I love color mixing videos. Winser and Newton has a PY159 but I don't believe it's granulating.
If not they must mill it more finely than Schmincke
It granulates, but it's not as strong of a tinting strength.
♥️
Glad you like it 😉
I have just started painting, I bought the Schmincke shire set of super granulating, but I don’t get why we want them to granulate.
It can add texture to your painting without having to paint in those subtle details. Like rocks or color variations in fields, or textures in foliage.
@@ClarkFineArt Thank you 😊
@@jjsmakeupobsession323 you are welcome.
Ugh I saw urban green
😂 you have to trust your gut.