using acrylics
featured pigment
 
raw titanium p.w.6
A very opaque off-white pigment.
- Particularly suitable for lightening other pigments while
making them duller
- Also useful as a base for blending skin tones
Raw titanium is a less
processed form of titanium white pigment and is sometimes
marketed as unbleached titanium or titanium buff. Titanium
pigment begins manufacture in a black powder form and is
progressively lightened using different bleaching processes
until it is pure white. Raw titanium is characterized by
a yellowish brown colour because it is not fully bleached
out. This beige colour is particularly convenient in portraiture
as a base for blending skin tones.
Using Raw Titanium produces very opaque blends and tends
to give the paint surface an unusual enamel like appearance.
The flow properties (which are how the paint feels and behaves
when spread around or manipulated) are very smooth and fluid.
This form of titanium is very useful for colour mixing,
especially when using a muted or “historical”
palette by making it possible to make clean modern pigments
appear more like their historical counterparts. For example
sample #19, a tint of the traditional pigment cerulean,
is similar in hue to sample #18; a blend of phthalo blue
with raw titanium, whereas phthalo blue blended with titanium
white, (sample# 17) is quite different. Traditional mineral
pigments are expensive and not always readily available
– using blends of modern pigments with raw titanium
is a very economical alternative.
Blending with raw titanium is a very effective and convenient
way of reducing the saturation level of a colour (making
colours duller) in a very precise and subtle way. Samples
#4 through #12 show how easy it is to make light, desaturated
colours by simply adding single colours to raw titanium.
Modulating a colour using darker earthtone pigments to create
colour matches or precise shades often results in overshooting
and backtracking. Using raw titanium as an alternative way
to desaturate colours is especially economical when working
with small quantities of paint. Trying to match these colours
using titanium white and dull pigments such as raw sienna
and raw umber do not produce the same end results as shown
in examples #14 and #16. The subtleties in colour that a
white pigment can give to a coloured pigment in a mix can
be very difficult if not impossible to match in any other
way.
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