This rare paint takes “Beetlejuice” LITERALLY.👁️🪲

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 14 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 953

  • @annamossity8879
    @annamossity8879 Місяць тому +6430

    Cochineal has been used in everything from dye to lipstick!

    • @StellaMariaGiulia
      @StellaMariaGiulia Місяць тому +263

      ....to food

    • @sleepykaiju
      @sleepykaiju Місяць тому +38

      was used in campari back in the day too!

    • @Garfdup007
      @Garfdup007 Місяць тому +97

      @@StellaMariaGiuliayou wouldn’t even notice and it is better for you then a dye without the little protein it has plus it’s better then artificial dyes by a long shot

    • @StellaMariaGiulia
      @StellaMariaGiulia Місяць тому +32

      @@Garfdup007 I didn't say I have a problem with it! 😉

    • @Boohurghhoo
      @Boohurghhoo Місяць тому +5

      I was gonna say how beautiful it would be in lipsticks but eh someone thought that through ofc😂

  • @pastafour3717
    @pastafour3717 Місяць тому +7047

    One correction: cochineals are true bugs, not beetles. They are one of a group commonly called “scale insects”.

    • @bekahart
      @bekahart  Місяць тому +1028

      Oooooh great input!! That honestly makes a lot of sense- they don’t look very beetle-y

    • @L4N4OnPaws
      @L4N4OnPaws Місяць тому +17

      2nd reply!

    • @Yaksoup98
      @Yaksoup98 Місяць тому +21

      ​@@bekahartyes, the english language is just a bit dumb hah

    • @fioregiallo
      @fioregiallo Місяць тому +8

      Their fuzzy lil cousins are the bane of my existence 😂

    • @Jupitersea667
      @Jupitersea667 Місяць тому +11

      They also use them in a lot of cosmetics and some foods

  • @everiffy
    @everiffy Місяць тому +1542

    Fun fact! Cochineals have been used to make pigments and dyes since the 700s BC!
    It was used extensively by American civilizations to dye textiles. In the 16th century, it was imported to europe, and was implicated in the triangle trade from the 16th to 19th centuries. It eventually came to compete with synthetic red dyes, which dropped prices, making it more affordable.

    • @Num_hee
      @Num_hee Місяць тому +2

      the american kind is much more pigmented than the european one! Much less smashed bugs were needed to achieve the same shade 😎

    • @GilTheDragon
      @GilTheDragon Місяць тому +7

      Its main competition was the Kermes bug. Finding such easily accessible carmine in the americas (they mostly feed off the prickly pear plant, & are a not uncommon garden pest) made the spanish quite a lot of silver
      It is also e120 as a food aditive

    • @sadpearl2217
      @sadpearl2217 25 днів тому

      Excuse me, since this is the topic of conversation; may i mention Pal Brazil? It's very important to the history of my country :').
      Beautiful red, but the exploration made it almost extinct.

  • @ricardobenjaminsanchezpere9240
    @ricardobenjaminsanchezpere9240 Місяць тому +424

    A lot of fun facts but I got THE fun fact
    Cochinilla's pigments can interact with ph, here in Mexico and South America it was commonly used for dying clothes, the color range can be so extensive, from a dark red, to oranges, to violets, to purples depending on the ph ❤

    • @cassie.m.0723
      @cassie.m.0723 Місяць тому +12

      You're right, this IS the best fun fact!

    • @Vaggie92
      @Vaggie92 Місяць тому +4

      This is actually a really fun fact that my brain loves (one of my biggest special interests is the history of fashion lol, has been since I was 13)

    • @GilTheDragon
      @GilTheDragon Місяць тому +4

      So not unlike the tyrian snail. I once had to pull out a book on dyeing to show someone that murex "purple" went from like barney purple to red

    • @escubidupapa5911
      @escubidupapa5911 9 днів тому +3

      ​@@GilTheDragonThe color purple was also widely used in pre-Hispanic times, only unlike the purple used in Europe and the Mediterranean where snails were crushed to obtain the pigment, In America the snails were wrapped in fabrics and clothes that people wanted to paint so that they secreted the liquid that gave that color

  • @chantgr6096
    @chantgr6096 Місяць тому +295

    The moment I saw the color I new what it was. A while ago I visited a workshop in Mexico that used traditional methods to dye textiles. The cochineal color is so characteristic and the craftsmanship was impressive

    • @kittykahdy
      @kittykahdy Місяць тому +9

      I'm Mexican and my dad said my grandma used these to dye the sweet tamales pink

  • @beth4107
    @beth4107 Місяць тому +973

    also known as carmine! so if you ever see that in your lipstick ingredients… definitely not vegan!

    • @shiser59
      @shiser59 Місяць тому +62

      or FOOD!

    • @Boohurghhoo
      @Boohurghhoo Місяць тому +20

      But it’s not toxic, or too toxic like any other paints out of the 18/1900s right..?

    • @Takapon218
      @Takapon218 Місяць тому +48

      @@Boohurghhoono. They're not toxic. It's just really cruel and inhumane practice.

    • @princess7jasmine
      @princess7jasmine Місяць тому +87

      @@Takapon218 They are literally bugs.

    • @happy_west3140
      @happy_west3140 Місяць тому +36

      @@Takapon218 they are literally bugs.

  • @AliceDeBois
    @AliceDeBois Місяць тому +489

    Fun facts. They are the primary ingredient in red food dyes.

    • @brencislloyd9517
      @brencislloyd9517 Місяць тому +41

      Most red food dyes are synthetic these days but for a very long time, yes you are correct.

    • @AliceDeBois
      @AliceDeBois Місяць тому +39

      @@brencislloyd9517 Carmine is the other name for the bug additive, and it's in everything from sodas to candies. It's a regular food dye for strawberry flavored things, they have it in M&M's. It's super common.

    • @brencislloyd9517
      @brencislloyd9517 Місяць тому +19

      @@AliceDeBois I'm gonna assume you're in Europe. In the US it very much is not the red dye in M&Ms. We have Red 40 in our M&Ms. Most red dye in the US is Red 40.

    • @karoshi2
      @karoshi2 Місяць тому +20

      ​@@brencislloyd9517 which is ... let's agree on "curious", because red 40 isn't a legal food additive in (at least most of) Europe because it's cancerous.
      Not sure about the chances they found. Could be anything between "possibly", "probably" or "definitely", don't know.

    • @brencislloyd9517
      @brencislloyd9517 Місяць тому

      @@karoshi2 a lot of things cause cancer. Alcohol can. Too much acid reflux can. Hell just AGING can.
      Don't talk to me about things that cause cancer, my mom died of cancer literally just a few months ago. I know you don't know me but still. Don't just throw around "cancerous" like it's some kinda gotcha for everything. Trust me I know what things cause cancer.
      And I'm not saying red 40 is better. I'm just saying that cochineal is really gross to a lot of people, for religious/vegan/vegetarian/just in general not wanting to eat bug goo reasons, and can also be an allergen too. We need a better red food dye than either of them. I'm also just saying that no it's not the red dye used in M&Ms everywhere.

  • @Eugene_of_Theodoro
    @Eugene_of_Theodoro Місяць тому +86

    Cochineal wasn't discovered as a pigment in the 1840's. It has been used to dye clothing since atleast the second century BC, and was used to color the Aztec Codices in the 16th century.

    • @hummingmostbird
      @hummingmostbird Місяць тому +8

      I think that's just the origin of the bottle she has, she did some tests with a couple of pigments from the same lot to see if they were mummy brown (which they were probably not, but it was kinda hard to tell)

    • @LouisArce-n1u
      @LouisArce-n1u Місяць тому +1

      The Maya in southern Mexico also used it.

    • @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart
      @SeanMahoneyfitnessandart Місяць тому

      Discovered by westerners in 1840.... therefore, obviously that's when it was "invented" 😂😂

    • @ladykoiwolfe
      @ladykoiwolfe Місяць тому +1

      ​@@hummingmostbirdtrue, but it should be mentioned.

  • @HeyyMissRandom
    @HeyyMissRandom Місяць тому +77

    The moment I saw the lil grey pebbles, I screamed "ohh cochineal red!!!"

  • @ZXVLAD
    @ZXVLAD Місяць тому +47

    cochineal beetle, grana cochinilla so a better translation is Garnet cochineals, was used by Meso-American cultures since before the colonial period, is ph sensitive and ranges from dull greyish blue to green, passing by yellow, orange then red, and finally pink and purple, and they are delicious as frick, especially with lemon and chili powder, is hard to harvest them.

    • @rikospostmodernlife
      @rikospostmodernlife Місяць тому

      From what I remember grana or granate is an old world insect that gives a darker tone, this is carmine

  • @midnight_rap_battles
    @midnight_rap_battles Місяць тому +78

    Bekah really made our millennium with this video

  • @Gkit919
    @Gkit919 Місяць тому +74

    That is the beetle used in Ocean spray ruby red grapefruit juice!

    • @ic3f4iry
      @ic3f4iry Місяць тому +5

      Carmine dye is also known as cochineal extract, Natural Red 4, and Crimson Lake, and it’s in red velvet cake! 😆

    • @korykent5645
      @korykent5645 Місяць тому

      Like actual beetle bugs? Bc I think consumers should know that

    • @ww897
      @ww897 Місяць тому

      @@korykent5645 no genius

    • @JyyceKrato
      @JyyceKrato Місяць тому

      It's a chemical taken and refined from beetles not the beetles themselves​@@korykent5645

  • @GUSTAVO_06
    @GUSTAVO_06 Місяць тому +19

    Cochineal Beatles are used to make Carmine, which is a naturally red dye used in almost everything.

    • @ic3f4iry
      @ic3f4iry Місяць тому +2

      Yep. Carmine dye is also known as cochineal extract, Natural Red 4, and Crimson Lake, and it’s in red velvet cake! Along with many other foods such as-
      Skittles, ocean spray ruby red grapefruit, Strawberry and berry yogurts, Bright red lollipops, candies, cherry pies, cupcakes and other baked goods, Tropicana grapefruit juice and other fruit juices, Some meat products & seafood products, And more!!
      Carmine is also used in cosmetics, such as lipsticks, blush, and eye shadow!

    • @radioactivebirbchild
      @radioactivebirbchild Місяць тому

      @@ic3f4iry I wish it was more commonly used in the US, we're stuck with red 40, which is something I can't have

  • @OzymandiusStudios
    @OzymandiusStudios Місяць тому +47

    Fun fact: cochineal also used to give skittles their red hue

    • @SwirlyPinwheel
      @SwirlyPinwheel Місяць тому +5

      Mmmm beettles

    • @maddydavidsdottir9862
      @maddydavidsdottir9862 Місяць тому +1

      And they still use it in M&Ms in europe

    • @tomguth3714
      @tomguth3714 Місяць тому

      Even funnier fact.
      They are used extensively in Europe since their only good alternative is red 40 which has been proven as a strong carcinogen. Europe banned the use of red 40, in US FDA has said that red 40 is food grade and that in small amounts it’s harmless (later this was proven as false statement).
      You can use anything you want but I would much rather use the dye that comes from tiny bugs that has been used for centuries than a carcinogen that is gonna fuck up my dna.

    • @ic3f4iry
      @ic3f4iry Місяць тому +1

      And red velvet cake !!!

    • @petal979
      @petal979 Місяць тому

      @@maddydavidsdottir9862 no

  • @Catsandbeetles
    @Catsandbeetles Місяць тому +30

    when you said beetlejuice my obsessed ass almost fell over 😭

  • @MeigetsuNoSeishin
    @MeigetsuNoSeishin Місяць тому +37

    Pennsylvania resident here! That bottle is adorable! So tiny!
    Ive heard of these beetles and the pigment from them before! Rather pretty

  • @VeebsterTV
    @VeebsterTV Місяць тому +20

    Probably the same but the old one had some additional additive that gave it a slightly different colour, or the beetles were harvested from a different region. Something in their environment or diet difference may have altered their biochemistry, effecting the colour tone

    • @eowalton
      @eowalton Місяць тому +1

      Mexico was the historic producer with a domesticated insect but Peru is the current one with an different subspecies on a different subspecies of prickly pear.

    • @VeebsterTV
      @VeebsterTV Місяць тому

      @@eowalton that’s makes a lot of sense, and is likely the reason for the perceived change

  • @twistedmyth5860
    @twistedmyth5860 Місяць тому +12

    Huh, that explains why you use cochineal beetles to make red dye.

  • @brencislloyd9517
    @brencislloyd9517 Місяць тому +5

    Also called carmine and its still used pretty extensively in food and makeup. The bugs are a parasite of pad cactuses and theyre picked off and crushed up. Personally, i find it horrifying but 🤷
    There's also a neon pink tequila that boasts using them as its only dye source.

    • @genericyoutubename9400
      @genericyoutubename9400 Місяць тому

      It’s in so much eyeshadow now. Even stuff that’s labeled vegan. I’m highly allergic to carmine so this is so problematic! It used to be used in only pinks, red, and purples but I’m finding it in blues and greens too.

    • @brencislloyd9517
      @brencislloyd9517 Місяць тому +1

      @@genericyoutubename9400 I'm sorry it really sucks.
      Not exactly the same but I'm very allergic to rosemary and it's in like 90% of skin care products these days I stg. Just can I please have a lotion that doesn't trigger my allergies!?
      (Also at least in the US there are legal restrictions to labeling things as vegan and you can report these things to the FDA. Yes even makeup)

    • @genericyoutubename9400
      @genericyoutubename9400 Місяць тому +1

      @@brencislloyd9517 That’s a game changer! I had no idea that there was anything that could be done. I’m going to find out how to make reports.
      Sorry about your rosemary allergy. Hopefully these damn trends will change and we won’t have ALL products with rosemary or carmine!

  • @CogitoErgoSumFortis
    @CogitoErgoSumFortis Місяць тому +2

    Grana Cochinilla was used by the Aztecs and had been in use by mesoamerican civilizations for millenia. The beetles grow on Nopales (prickly pear cactus) and since the colonization by the Spanish, it was one of the most common pigments to create that deep red colour in European paintings for over 4 centuries.

  • @haykay2787
    @haykay2787 Місяць тому +3

    The pure cochineal is so pretty its a nice almost a pinky purple when you added white even if it is dull its really nice

  • @1988vikable
    @1988vikable Місяць тому +2

    Its an artisan invention from Mexico aka Mesoamerica they would harvest these beetles from Nopales a type of Cacti Native to Mexico and dry them and then crush them to get beautiful red color for their textiles.

  • @dbestwolf
    @dbestwolf Місяць тому +3

    Looks like the food dye found in most candies and treats today.

    • @Chaosbrain76
      @Chaosbrain76 Місяць тому +1

      Cochineal is legally acceptable and safe as a food dye, though it doesn't work if you want vegan food.
      The bugs contain a lot of carminic acid. It's basically carmine red.
      The term "Vermillion" comes from worm or insect based pigments.

  • @peanutbutersoraluver
    @peanutbutersoraluver 2 дні тому

    I literally never skip your videos. I love learning and listening to you talk about paints.

  • @instinctivelychelsea2905
    @instinctivelychelsea2905 Місяць тому +4

    Carmine. Not vegan clearly , this is used in WAY more than just paint, all kinds of cosmetics lipsticks ,eyeshadows and blushes.

  • @JackOfAllTradesButMasterOfNone
    @JackOfAllTradesButMasterOfNone 27 днів тому

    It’s BEAUTIFUL!!! 😍😍😍

  • @amyszewski
    @amyszewski Місяць тому +26

    We eat those bugs too lol

  • @TomassonJakob
    @TomassonJakob Місяць тому

    The opacity of the true red is so stunning. Sometimes old paints shock you!

  • @portafotogenica8700
    @portafotogenica8700 Місяць тому

    I love this tone of red, its so pretty

  • @michelhv
    @michelhv Місяць тому +4

    Campari used to be bug-coloured. So is this the mummy brown of insects?

  • @glenndhooge6787
    @glenndhooge6787 Місяць тому +2

    Love the little safety geat sticker 😁

  • @alycat24ab
    @alycat24ab Місяць тому +9

    The source of Red 40 dye!!
    Also why some people are allergic to Red 40 dye. Body doesn't like the bugs. (Condolences to my MCAS Buddies out there 🫡🫂🦓🧂🥄🧡)

    • @shiser59
      @shiser59 Місяць тому +6

      That's not correct; Red 40 is a completely synthetic coloring. The coloring from cochineal extract is *_Red 4_*

    • @donttellthefbiimhere9426
      @donttellthefbiimhere9426 Місяць тому

      @@shiser59yep!! red 40 is made from petroleum

    • @seajelly2421
      @seajelly2421 Місяць тому

      I've wondered about this. I've got MCAS and a severe allergy to crustaceans. I'm curious if cochineals are close enough to crustaceans to cause a reaction. Though I don't actually want to find out!

    • @abaddon2148
      @abaddon2148 Місяць тому

      Red 40 is a cancer causing synthetic dye. Natural Red 4 (or carmine, etc) is cochineal bugs

    • @genericyoutubename9400
      @genericyoutubename9400 Місяць тому +1

      ⁠@@seajelly2421No, I’m severely allergic to cochineals but I can eat shellfish all I want. Finding eyeshadow that is safe is so hard! Even the vegan stuff will be mislabeled and have carmine/cochineals it in it. The worst. I don’t have MCAS (that I know of), and don’t know what that is.

  • @emmataylor-rennie8353
    @emmataylor-rennie8353 Місяць тому

    It makes the prettiest pink ❤

  • @my_uhh
    @my_uhh Місяць тому +9

    i love ur sticker version of you in the back!!❤also that dye is sometimes used in food!!

  • @ItzMeImAlive
    @ItzMeImAlive Місяць тому

    OMG OMG I LOVE THIS PAINT

  • @just_me_myself_and_I_99
    @just_me_myself_and_I_99 Місяць тому

    It's gorgeous

  • @VRCNet
    @VRCNet Місяць тому

    It’s beautiful

  • @nicolopanti1169
    @nicolopanti1169 Місяць тому

    Very beautiful color, great video.

  • @RealSimsHouse
    @RealSimsHouse Місяць тому

    So pretty.

  • @gabbyaineauer3357
    @gabbyaineauer3357 Місяць тому

    This pigment is the prettiest red I've ever seen. I need this in my life.

  • @unofficialgrasseater
    @unofficialgrasseater Місяць тому

    CARMINE!!! ONE OF MY FAVORITE REDS

  • @valerierose19
    @valerierose19 Місяць тому +1

    As a native Pennsylvanian - love that PA has been providing you art history ♡♡

  • @janisvaro4949
    @janisvaro4949 Місяць тому

    GORGEOUS!!

  • @nez60222
    @nez60222 Місяць тому +1

    "Beetlejuice?" yeeesss.. Beetlejuice !yeesss beeeeeeeee-cause!

  • @CC101CC
    @CC101CC Місяць тому

    What a beautiful color 😍

  • @FrancescoDeo_
    @FrancescoDeo_ Місяць тому +1

    The red "rare paint" "mystery pigment": a commonly used food coloring

  • @Blanddog
    @Blanddog Місяць тому

    I loove this woman...

  • @danajetton4704
    @danajetton4704 Місяць тому

    Beautiful color!

  • @vesstig
    @vesstig Місяць тому

    I love the pink

  • @TheNraveles
    @TheNraveles Місяць тому

    god that dark blood red color is just…so gorgeous

  • @debrarobillard1116
    @debrarobillard1116 Місяць тому

    Gorgeous!

  • @goddesslove7
    @goddesslove7 Місяць тому

    Your voice sounds so much like the narration of the 1940s it's so cool and so refreshing. Haven't heard that kind of voice in this day and age, so unique

  • @Sakuyamon
    @Sakuyamon Місяць тому

    Carmine is such a gorgeous red.

  • @KenBlankenship-v2r
    @KenBlankenship-v2r Місяць тому

    I love what ya do keep being awesome ms. Lady

  • @ivyrose779
    @ivyrose779 Місяць тому

    Cochineal makes the prettiest reds imo. I especially love the darkest one.

  • @Mimikyuke
    @Mimikyuke Місяць тому +1

    Ah. I hated collecting the beetle husks in terraria for dyes

  • @michaelmichaelmichael1238
    @michaelmichaelmichael1238 Місяць тому

    I love that color

  • @CaydenCrockatt
    @CaydenCrockatt 21 день тому

    Always love these popping in my feed, I collect bottles from around the 1860-1960s, and due to your content it has interested me a bunch seeing all of these breathtaking historic colors and the history of them. Keep doing what ya love!

  • @andresciahooten9598
    @andresciahooten9598 Місяць тому

    I love that color! Red is one of my favorite colors. Especially, that blood red color

  • @updownstate
    @updownstate Місяць тому

    I don't know why I like this channel so much. Just so damn interesting, I guess.

  • @LadyRogue420
    @LadyRogue420 Місяць тому

    Beautiful red

  • @SupremeLadyofDarkness28
    @SupremeLadyofDarkness28 Місяць тому

    that is a gorgeous shade of red. ❤

  • @wikkedgoddess1
    @wikkedgoddess1 Місяць тому

    Beautiful beetlejuice

  • @eacalvert
    @eacalvert Місяць тому

    This whole video was a set up for a Beetle Juice joke and I am 100% here for it

  • @ironbomb6753
    @ironbomb6753 28 днів тому

    Collecting vintage paint has got to be one of the cooler things to collect. Im fascinated ❤👍

  • @justaskin8523
    @justaskin8523 22 дні тому

    "Is this paint...Beetlejuice?" I saw that coming since a week ago last Tuesday, Tuesday, Tuesday. But your delivery still made me laugh. Thanks, laughing is good!

  • @Sylph-Eater
    @Sylph-Eater Місяць тому

    This is the coolest fucking channel ever... I feel like it's going to end up in some kind of historical archive.

  • @CyanCyclomyces
    @CyanCyclomyces Місяць тому +2

    They infest my cacti every so often, I’m thinking of “harvesting” them this time. I’d be interested to see you do something like that to make your own personal pigment - I wonder if the colour would be very different.

  • @leahhale2179
    @leahhale2179 Місяць тому

    I would love that color and crayon and lipstick!

  • @ccriztoff
    @ccriztoff Місяць тому +1

    why is this girl so cute

  • @colexicanadraws4356
    @colexicanadraws4356 Місяць тому +1

    I love how u kinda sound like mrs puff shawty ❤

  • @WendyvanPenderen
    @WendyvanPenderen 5 днів тому

    I love Tim burton

  • @Vaggie92
    @Vaggie92 Місяць тому

    I love the pun at the end 😂

  • @DonnieNeedsCoffee
    @DonnieNeedsCoffee 27 днів тому

    The tricky part about Cochineal is that it is also an indicator. A little acid or base and it becomes a different color. I had a rug from Oaxaca that used all the variations of the dye in the pattern. Beautiful!

  • @idratherjustbeaniceguy7281
    @idratherjustbeaniceguy7281 Місяць тому

    nice punch line and delivery

  • @pharoah334
    @pharoah334 Місяць тому

    Perfect for halloween decorations

  • @juanQ563
    @juanQ563 Місяць тому

    Colors are crazy damn

  • @xenamartinez1583
    @xenamartinez1583 Місяць тому

    I loveee that! 😂

  • @karenshort3880
    @karenshort3880 Місяць тому +2

    Yes,I would call it Beetlejuice

  • @JohnDavidRomo-es6rr
    @JohnDavidRomo-es6rr Місяць тому

    Awesome, i want to see art!

  • @JessieNihilist
    @JessieNihilist Місяць тому

    Its beautiful. Its so fascinating where we have gotten pigment in the past and still to this day.

  • @lukeplaysroblox2418
    @lukeplaysroblox2418 Місяць тому

    the way I gasped when you smashed those tiny little bugs

  • @DeanJMU
    @DeanJMU Місяць тому

    I watched this short three times and now Michael Keaton is jump scaring me at inopportune moments.

  • @MrLandShark55_55
    @MrLandShark55_55 Місяць тому +1

    Believe it or not, those parasitic insects are in a lot of our food.

  • @RERECHRONICLES
    @RERECHRONICLES Місяць тому

    That was cute ❤

  • @blarthunder
    @blarthunder Місяць тому

    terraria really clutched with this one

  • @frankkiejo5560
    @frankkiejo5560 День тому

    Gorgeous’😍❤️😍

  • @LouisArce-n1u
    @LouisArce-n1u Місяць тому

    Cochineal bugs are still used in Oaxaca Mexico. The traditional Zapotec weavers only use natural dyes . The Cochineal are harvested from the" Nopal, " AKA " cactus."

  • @dagrazytcom5492
    @dagrazytcom5492 Місяць тому +1

    So. It's blood. 'oh, I took a handful of bugs and crushed them up. I then pulverized their bodies until it was a goo. Afterwards, when that red paste bug goo set, I added it to my sunset painting'. It's blood, bro.

  • @Sudgilicious
    @Sudgilicious Місяць тому

    BEETLEJUICE

  • @starcrunch6497
    @starcrunch6497 Місяць тому

    I’m from Pennsylvania!

  • @chrisfox479
    @chrisfox479 Місяць тому

    I love the name beetlejuice that's awesome

  • @GeminiS...
    @GeminiS... Місяць тому

    That was a long way to go for that joke, but I appreciate it.

  • @antalschleich5300
    @antalschleich5300 11 днів тому

    I sure would love to see you actually paint a painting with these paints

  • @summydog
    @summydog Місяць тому

    HELL YEAH FINALLY SOMETHING NEAT ABOUT PA WHEN IT COMES TO PAINT

  • @abriannaaguilera2123
    @abriannaaguilera2123 Місяць тому

    Cochinilla, they were (or are idk) used for red dye in the Americas since before the European colonisation. It was used to dye clothes and fabrics. Mad expensive.

  • @Irlyhatesandworms
    @Irlyhatesandworms Місяць тому +3

    Say that word around.. two more times ;]

  • @EavenStarchilde
    @EavenStarchilde Місяць тому

    Wow, that paint is still so vibrant!!❤

  • @averyliz1357
    @averyliz1357 Місяць тому +1

    The red pigment made out of bugs. I’m pretty sure as also used as a type of food

  • @ERose-fq3ss
    @ERose-fq3ss Місяць тому

    Stay and read this comment for 2 fun facts!
    1. Cochineal beetles were smashes up and put into many things including stuff you eat for example, nerds gummy clusters.
    2. Tim Burton was abused as a child and in most of his books/movies, he would make the adults well..bad. For example, take the new Willie Wonka movie. The housekeeper was evil and chard gets him extra for tiny stuff so he would have to stay and work for her. You could also take Coraline. Her other mother was extremely bad at the end which made a turning point.
    Ty for reading this! I’m srry if it’s not what you expected but yeah! Ty!