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Gamblin 1980 Oils - Titanium White, 37 ml (1.25oz)

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Titanium White reflects 97.5% of all available light, making it the perfect choice for direct painting. Monet would have loved it because he wanted his paintings to look soft, like velvet. The covering power of Titanium White is useful for creating opaque layers, but T-Z White is preferable for colour-mixing.

  • Pigment Name: PW6 Titanium White (Titanium dioxide)
  • Vehicle: Alkali refined Safflower oil
  • Lightfastness: I
  • Opacity: Opaque
  • Series: 1
  • Warning: SDS Cancer and reproductive harm – www.P65Warnings.ca.gov

Item #: 7810

Description:  Gamblin 1980 Oils - Titanium White, 37 ml (1.25oz)

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$9.95
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In Stock online: 3

Gamblin 1980 Oils - PW6 Titanium White

Gamblin’s approach is different. 1980 colours contain pure pigments, the finest refined linseed oil, and marble dust (calcium carbonate). Since oil painting began, these three ingredients have made more affordable colours.

Painters experience true colours without homogenized texture or muddy colour mixtures. Gamblin's approach to using traditional raw materials and processes ensures that artists experience the luscious working properties they expect from their oil colours.

Titanium White reflects 97.5% of all available light; this most opaque white is the perfect choice for direct painting. Monet would have loved it because he wanted his paintings to look soft, like velvet. The covering power of Titanium White is useful for creating opaque layers, but T-Z White is preferable for colour-mixing.

PIGMENT COMPOSITION AND PERMANENCE

Pigment Name: PW6 Titanium White (Titanium dioxide)

Pigment Type: inorganic

PROPERTIES

Titanium White is the most brilliant of the white pigments. It is considered an all-purpose oil colour that is useful in all techniques and the best all-around white. Its masstone is neither warm nor cool, placing it between Lead White and Zinc White. It is less prone to cracking and yellowing than Lead White, but it still yellows easily. Titanium White dries slowly in oil form, more slowly than Lead White but more quickly than Zinc White. It is opaque in oil and acrylic forms and semi-opaque in watercolour form. This pigment has good chemical stability, and its tinting strength is superior to Lead White and Zinc White.

PERMANENCE

Titanium White has excellent permanence and lightfastness.

TOXICITY

Titanium dioxide is highly stable and is regarded as completely non-toxic. Animal studies do not indicate that it is absorbed biologically, even after long periods of exposure. The primary safety concern is with the inhalation of fine pigment dust particles.

HISTORY

Titanium is the ninth most abundant element in the Earth's crust. However, mineral deposits that are economical to mine are rare. Titanium dioxide was first discovered in 1821, although it could not be mass-produced until 1919. Widespread use of the pigment began in the 1940s.

Since that time, it has become the most commonly used white pigment. The name comes from the Latin word Titan, the name for the elder brother of Kronos and ancestor of the Titans, and the Greek word tito, meaning day or sun.

Size

120ml

Brand

Gamblin

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