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Ways to produce vivid purple paint

“I have finally discovered the true color of the atmosphere,” Claude Monet once declared. “It’s violet. Fresh air is violet.” The purple shadows and lavender specks of light that enliven Monet’s haystacks and waterlilies owe much to a little-known American portrait painter named John Goffe Rand. In 1841, Rand grew frustrated with the messy practice of storing paint in a pig’s bladder, which was the prevailing method for preserving pigments at the time, and invented a more practical and portable option: a collapsible paint tube made of tin. This enabled artists like Monet to paint plein air, easily transporting their color to outdoor locations to capture impressions of the environment, and in turn led to the production of nuanced, pre-mixed paint shades in tin tubes, such as Manganese Violet, the first affordable mauve-colored paint that meant artists no longer had to mix red and blue to make purple. The Impressionists—especially Monet—so adored the new hue that critics accused the painters of having “violettomania.”


A Brief History of Color in Art

Artists invented the first pigments—a combination of soil, animal fat, burnt charcoal, and chalk—as early as 40,000 years ago, creating a basic palette of five colors: red, yellow, brown, black, and white. Since then, the history of color has been one of perpetual discovery, whether through exploration or scientific advancement. The invention of new pigments accompanied the developments of art history’s greatest movements—from the Renaissance to Impressionism—as artists experimented with colors never before seen in the history of painting.

Raphael
The Cardinal, 1510
Museo Nacional del Prado
Tassili-n-Ajjer, Nigeria
Section of rock-wall painting, ca. 5000-2000 B.C.
Art History 101

First employed in prehistoric cave paintings, red ochre is one of the oldest pigments still in use.

Found in iron-rich soil and first employed as an artistic material (as far as we know) in prehistoric cave paintings, red ochre is one of the oldest pigments still in use. Centuries later, during the 16th and 17th centuries, the most popular red pigment came from a cochineal insect, a creature that could only be found on prickly-pear cacti in Mexico. These white bugs produced a potent red dye so sought-after by artists and patrons that it quickly became the third greatest import out of the “New World” (after gold and silver), as explains Victoria Finlay in A Brilliant History of Color in Art. Raphael, Rembrandt, and Rubens all used cochineal as a glaze, layering the pigment atop other reds (like red ochre) to increase their intensity. A non-toxic source for red pigment, the cochineal bug is still used to color lipsticks and blush today.

Yves Klein
IKB 49, 1960
Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Berlin
Sassoferrato
The Virgin in Prayer, 1640-1650
The National Gallery, London
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For hundreds of years, the cost of lapis lazuli rivaled even the price of gold.

Ever since the Medieval era, painters have depicted the Virgin Mary in a bright blue robe, choosing the color not for its religious symbolism, but rather for its hefty price tag. Mary’s iconic hue—called ultramarine blue—comes from lapis lazuli, a gemstone that for centuries could only be found in a single mountain range in Afghanistan. This precious material achieved global popularity, adorning Egyptian funerary portraits, Iranian Qur’ans, and later the headdress in Vermeer’s Girl with a Pearl Earring (1665). For hundreds of years, the cost of lapis lazuli rivaled even the price of gold. In the 1950s, Yves Klein collaborated with a Parisian paint supplier to invent a synthetic version of ultramarine blue, and this color became the French artist’s signature. Explaining the appeal of this historic hue, Klein said, “Blue has no dimensions. It is beyond dimensions.”

J. M. W. Turner
Approach to Venice, 1844
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
Permanent collection
Vincent van Gogh
Sunflowers, 1889
Van Gogh Museum

WORKS GREAT ON

Angelus paint can be used on countless materials making it perfect to customize almost all of your favorite items.

Angelus Paints can be used on leather shoes, bags, furniture, and more.

Canvas Shoes, Bags, Coats, & More

Angelus paint can be used on wood such as skateboards, guitars, furniture and more.

Skateboards, Guitars, & more.

Angelus paint can be used on plastic such as headphones, cups, plastic tabs on shoes, and more.

PLASTIC

Headphones, Shoe Tabs, & more.

Angelus paint can be used on denim jackets, denim jeans, and more

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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