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Thread: Question for someone older ...

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
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    Windham, Vermont, USA
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    Quote Originally Posted by Freedom View Post
    I'm not finding a Lord anything. Maybe you mean Logwood?

    http://www.paintmaking.com/historic_pigments.htm
    It was not Logwood, that's for sure. And the one I am thinking of specifically was not purplish when thinner, more on the teal side of blue than the purple side like Indigo ink is.
    I've Been Frosted

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Delaware, USA - The First State/Diamond State - home of The Blue Hens
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    Well I certainly qualify as "older", , but there are no bells ringing here in DE.

    Asiel might know - she does a lot of art work, but hasn't been around much lately either, due to some illness in her family. I'll be emailing her later today or tomorrow, so I'll have her take a look at this thread. She's even "older" than I am!!!
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    To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven.
    Ecclesiastes 3:1
    The clock of life is wound but once and no man has the power
    To know just when the hands will stop - on what day, or what hour.
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2002
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    Kentucky, LAND OF THE EASILY AMUSED
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    Go look up the company, if you know it? Look up ink manufacturers and look at their inventory.

  4. #4
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    Jun 2000
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    Quote Originally Posted by RICHARD View Post
    Go look up the company, if you know it? Look up ink manufacturers and look at their inventory.
    I do not remember what the name of the company was, and it may have been a bottle I inherited from my grandmother. I could draw you the bottle shape, but ink manufacturing has changed a whole lot in the last 50-100 years, and a lot of old colors have been abandoned for being unstable, not light-resistant, etc.
    I've Been Frosted

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2000
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    Windham, Vermont, USA
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    I got the answer from cybersibes! Payne's Grey - my bottle said "Lord Payne's Grey" but he was not a lord, so I do not know why it was labeled as such!

    Some history:

    "The color Payne's Grey is named after a British watercolorist and art lecturer, William Payne (1760--1830), who recommended the mixture to students as a more subtle alternative to a gray mixed from black and white. In Artist's Pigments: c.1600-1835 Payne's grey is stipulated to originally have been "a mixture of lake, raw sienna and indigo."

    from http://painting.about.com/od/artglos...PaynesGrey.htm
    I've Been Frosted

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Methuen, MA; USA
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    I came back hoping you had the answer, and yup, you do! Great news!
    .

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
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    Copenhagen, Denmark - GMT+1
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    Glad you found the answer. Because of your question I looked for colors and found this:

    http://colorsstartingwitha.facts.co/...startwitha.php

    I have a cotton blouse/jacket that I really like the shape of, but not the color. It's pink, but not the right pink! I bought some "Rit" dye in USA, it's called "Scarlet." I wanted a dark "Crimson," that they didn't have, so I'll have a go with this one. Have you ever dyed clothes?



    "I don't know which weapons will be used in the third World war, but in the fourth, it will be sticks and stones" --- Albert Einstein.


  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    Aquidneck Island
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    8,333
    Quote Originally Posted by Karen View Post
    I got the answer from cybersibes! Payne's Grey - my bottle said "Lord Payne's Grey" but he was not a lord, so I do not know why it was labeled as such!

    Some history:

    "The color Payne's Grey is named after a British watercolorist and art lecturer, William Payne (1760--1830), who recommended the mixture to students as a more subtle alternative to a gray mixed from black and white. In Artist's Pigments: c.1600-1835 Payne's grey is stipulated to originally have been "a mixture of lake, raw sienna and indigo."

    from http://painting.about.com/od/artglos...PaynesGrey.htm
    Glad I could help - that's an interesting bit of history, Karen!

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