Winsor & Newton Designers Gouache - Tube of 14 ML - Perylene Violet (470)
Winsor & Newton Designers Gouache - Tube of 14 ML - Perylene Violet (470)
Winsor & Newton Designers Gouache - Tube of 14 ML - Perylene Violet (470)
Designers’ Gouache colours are made from the finest pigments, offering vibrant, opaque water colours with a flat, matt finish with tantalising range of 91 water colours. These are popular among designers, illustrators and commercial artists, our gouache paint is perfect for creating bold, vibrant artworks.
Perylene Violet is a light red pigment. Perylene is a modern synthetic organic pigment and was first available as a dye around 1912 before becoming available as an artist pigment in the late 1950s
Designers’ Gouache colours are made from the finest pigments, offering vibrant, opaque water colours with a flat, matt finish with tantalising range of 91 water colours. These are popular among designers, illustrators and commercial artists, our gouache paint is perfect for creating bold, vibrant artworks.
Perylene Violet is a light red pigment. Perylene is a modern synthetic organic pigment and was first available as a dye around 1912 before becoming available as an artist pigment in the late 1950s
The Galeria Acrylics line consists of 60 magnificent colors in 60ml tubes and 500ml Jars making it ideal for art & design students, hobbyists, muralists, decorative painters and fine artists who work on a grand scale.
Although Galeria Acrylics are sometimes referred to as a fine grade acrylic, their high pigment levels deliver professional results with significantly better covering power than many similarly priced brands
Designers’ Gouache colours are made from the finest pigments, offering vibrant, opaque water colours with a flat, matt finish with tantalising range of 91 water colours. These are popular among designers, illustrators and commercial artists, our gouache paint is perfect for creating bold, vibrant artworks.
Perylene Violet is a light red pigment. Perylene is a modern synthetic organic pigment and was first available as a dye around 1912 before becoming available as an artist pigment in the late 1950s