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COLOUR & PIGMENTS
The world we live in is full of colour and there is much of it that can be used to make paints and inks, something our ancestors were familiar with long ago. They discovered that red, brown and yellow ochres can be obtained from the soil, strong blues from lapis lazuli and cobalt, green from malachite, and white from lime and lead. Ash, from their fires, would have been mixed with animal fats to make blacks and greys, and the ashes of the animal and bird bones cooked over those fires make good whites. Many plants and berries are also used to obtain colour, among them woad and indigo which give good blues.
The chosen pigment is ground and mixed with gum, fat, or water to 'carry' it and make it flow. The colour resulting from these pigments can then be applied with anything that makes a decent brush, or applicator, whether it be twigs, which can be chewed to fray the ends, animal hair, the mouth or the hands. Early man often left his signature on drawings by leaving a hand print and some of these are surrounded by colour which looks as though it was blown from an airbrush, the hand print being excluded of colour. We can only deduce that the paint was actually blown from the mouth or, perhaps, from a bladder or gourd with a fine hole in it.
Cinnabar, or minium, the pigment obtained from red lead, was once used for the striking red lettering and decoration often to be found in the opening words of the text of a manuscript and in the page decoration. The Egyptians were among the first to find it striking enough to use in places of importance or emphasis, such as text headings, and it has been used by scribes throughout history. The Latin name for this pigment, minium, gives rise to the term miniature. The person skilled in working with minium was called a miniator and the things he applied his craft to were called miniatures, whether they were tiny or not.
The scribes of old also knew a thing or two about the long-
A clue to the original pigmentation of a certain colour is often in the names of
modern paints. Titanium white, cobalt blue, and veridian green are but a few and
the better quality artists paints will even contain that pigment. Although many paints
still use original pigments there are more and more chemically produced colours on
the market, which can offer better light-
INKS
Early writing inks were made in a similar way. One of the most common of the early inks was lampblack, which combines the ash from burning a fatty candle with gum, or glue and water. The ink has little colour when first applied to the surface but, as it dries, it oxidises on contact with air and darkens to a deep, purpley, black. Carbon is chemically inert and does not fade in sunlight making the ink almost permanent.
Another ink of old was iron-
It is the oak apple that supplies the gallic acid and the nail supplies the iron
salts.Sepia, the reddish-