Winsor & Newton Professional Acrylics - Hooker's Green, 200 ml tube

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Item #:01630-7124
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Winsor & Newton Professional Acrylic Paint - Hooker's Green, 200 ml tube and swatch

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Product Details

Description:
Professional Acrylics
Color:
Hooker's Green
Size:
200 ml (6.75 oz)
Format:
Tube
No.
311
Series:
2
Mfg #:
2337311

Colors on Monitors -

Due to differences in users’ monitors, the colors presented are an approximation of the true color.
Shipping Note - Due to manufacturer distribution restrictions, Winsor & Newton products cannot be shipped to addresses outside of North America.

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Pigment Information

This color contains the following pigments:

PB15-Phthalo Blue

PO49-Quinacridone Gold


Pigment Name

PB15-Phthalo Blue

Pigment Type

organic

Chemical Name

copper phthalocyanine

Chemical Formula

C32H16CuN8

Properties

Phthalo Blues are pure and clean primary blues with superior covering power. They have a very high tinting strength and tend to overwhelm other pigments, but if color strength can be controlled, they make predictable mixed colors. In oil form, blues are very deep and slow drying. When mixed with other colors or if chlorine is added, Phthalo Blue quickly tends towards green. When using alone, mix with some white, as Phthalo Blue can be semi-transparent and almost black on its own. It is among the most compatible of modern colors with mineral colors and is considered more reliable than Prussian Blue, while sharing the same physical and color properties. Phthalo Blue is a good color for glazing.

Permanence

Phthalo Blues are completely lightfast and stable and are permanent for all paint uses. They are currently used in inks, coatings, and many plastics due to their stability and are considered a standard pigment in printing ink and the packaging industry.

Toxicity

Phthalo Blues have no significant hazards, although those made before 1982 contained some PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls).

History

Developed by chemists using the trade name Monastral Blue, the organic blue dyestuff now known as Phthalo Blue was presented as a pigment in November 1935 in London. Its discovery was accidental. The dark color was observed in a kettle where a dye was being made from a British dyestuff plant. The demand for such a pigment came from commercial printers who wanted a cyan to replace Prussian Blue.


Pigment Name

PO49-Quinacridone Gold

Pigment Type

organic, quinacridone

Properties

Quinacridone Gold is a transparent yellow-orange pigment. Quinacridone pigments have relatively low tinting strength in general. For this reason, quinacridone colors are often expensive, because more pigment is required in the formulation.

Permanence

Quinacridone Gold has very good lightfastness.

History

Quinacridone Gold, a color developed for the automotive industry, is no longer being manufactured. Some color producers still have stocks of the pigment.


Safety Data Sheet

UPC Code: 094376991161

ASIN #: B0060KQUTO