I love using the Verona Gold Ochre, it is so beautiful and soft. So helpful to see similar colors side by side to choose wisely and not buy too many. Hope you’ll keep up this series! ❤️
Buy them all!! LOL! Ok, maybe not everyone is like me. I love this pigment from DS in ALL its variations, so I do, indeed, have them all. While they are all absolutely similar, there are subtle differences. The subtle differences can really make a huge difference in the moodiness (or lack thereof) in landscapes and seascapes, which is what I paint. I have both Verona Gold Ochre and Goethite on my main studio palette. I like the muted colors these make when mixed with blues and reds, but my favorite colors to mix these ochres with is PG7 or PB36. Truthfully, no one NEEDS them all. I just find them all to be beautiful.
I just want to thank you, Teoh, for these comparisons, it's so helpful to look at these swatches and mixes before buying. I've gone back to view a few of these again.
PY43>PY42 in my book. It’s one of my favorite pigments. Thank you Teoh! I use them to paint sandy scenes and the hills here in winter when they are golden brown.
Hello Teoh, I have Verona gold on my palette, I love the natural greens and blues you can get.Your pigment seemed a bit over bound with Gum Arabic. As a rule I prefer transparent pigments but every color has its rightful place. Claudia.
Yellow Ochre kinda is an essential color for any subject on whether portrait or landscape. You could mix your own ochres with just yellow and brown, but it's quicker to just have a golden blown color at your palette. One artist named Anders Zorn used it along with just red, black, and white to paint portraits.
Thank you Teoh for your informative videos! When I use my W&N Cotman sketchers box, I put the yellow ochre PY42 with viridian hue PG7 to mix all kinds of greens, and I love the peachy colours it gives with the reds. On its own I like raw sienna more. I bought the raw sienna PY43 by Rembrandt which I am now exploring. I have to say that your limited palette videos are very inspiring and taught me so much!
This is very useful information excellently presented. Thanks. I use Yellow Ochre straight from the tube, at most slightly tinted with something else, when I want a dull color. More often I use bright yellows. I paint abstracts.
I like how you don´t stay within the lines, like perfectly imperfect painting and sketches, to me that makes it more relaxing and enjoyable to keep practicing, also I really liked the burgundy, italian and brown ocre, very pretty colors :)
Thank you for this! There are so many paints to choose from, even if the pigment is the same, so it's really helpful to see how they compare. I'm currently using W&N Gold Ochre (PY42) but I'll have to check these out!
I had a moment when you showed the Burgundy yellow ochre where I immediately went ??? "Burgundy isn't YELLOW??" - then my brain caught up and remembered that Burgundy is a place 🤦 it's called Bourgogne in Swedish, and I generally don't have occasion to talk about the region so I just think about the colour when I hear it in English 😅
I use a gold ochre with a granulating blue to get a great cool/warm blue/yellow mix rather than a green. What you see are the two granulation rather than a combination of the colors
Your video illustrates why I dislike DS paints. Most of the seem to have more binder than pigment, and it takes a lot of paint to get the same kind of saturation that you can get with other manufacturers (like Winsor Newton).
I like Daniel Smith's ochres because most of them are transparent, although I occasionally use my Winsor & Newton more opaque Yellow Ochre. I have Burgundy Yellow Ochre in a couple of travel palettes, it's easier to get a sunnier look for buildings when urban sketching. Thanks for comparing all these colors, it's helpful when choosing new versions!!
I'm a big fan of ochres and especially like Geothite (brownish ochre). I am drawn to muted colours more so than vibrant colours. Like to paint mostly birds and country scenes, barns etc. Stay well everyone and continue to social distance and heed the advice of your authorities.
I am using a handmade french ochre and I love it and mostly use the color by itself. I sometimes mix it with purple/mauve to get a warm sandy greyish tone. I use it for skintones or evening skies
That Burgundy ochre is beautiful 😍 I'll have to look it up when Amazon start shipping to my country again 😂 8:13 this is my all time favorite limited palette video and now I have to watch it again:) I wonder what paper did you used for the mixing!
Thanks for the video, Teoh, I use raw sienna as well. Ochres can be opaque at times which is a property i don't enjoy when painting over inks. All of these colors look rather beautiful though!
I do like the golden ochre from Winsor & Newton because it is a lovely lively gradating ochre. It is cheery and bright yet could be calmed down. Some ochres are too quite and just not very transparent so I do like DS yellow ochre for quietness but the other for sometimes even in botanicals. Hansa deep could be added also but it changes the gradations 😊
Hello Teoh, It would be interesting if you could make some video explaining these pigments, i mean why its important, what to look for, how to compare, different binders etc.. Im not watercolour beginner but in these py... Im kinda lost. Like just some summary of all these things, if you already did some video about it im sorry. Keep it up! :)
For whatever reason my Daniel Smith yellow Orche does a more chalky, opaque look which I keep trying to like the results over and over again but I think I give up. Lemon Yellow mixes nice and Quin Gold has a nice rusty look when I’m careful to not use too much. I used Raw Sienna yesterday and I need to do a pigment number comparison with that to PY 43. Thanks!!
I have yellow ochre and goethite on my palette. I like the lighter slate gray I can make from yellow ochre + ultramarine blue. I'd like to compare it to Daniel Smith Raw Sienna Light. I'm still trying to get used to goethite.
I had ordered the Goethite about a week ago. I am wondering in what specific areas I can use it. It is one of the first times I went out my usual palette. If you use it for specific mixes/things please let me know. I realize it is s granulating color. Thank you!
I don’t enjoy the ochres as they are not saturated enough & don’t ”flow” as well. That said, Burgundy yellow ochre seems to be the exception, & I’ve recently picked up a tube after I saw a paint out of it from DS
Hey Teoh, didn’t you say at the end of the video you would sell some excess water color ? I’m interested but I can’t find a link or anything in the description:) maybe you can help
@@teohyc I love your limited palette sketches. I recently did a series of limited palettes but they were real funky colors and they turned out pretty weird
Hi Teoh and thanks for such informative video comparison...I d like to oder some earth DS paints , but cants clearly understand what is the difference between Monte Amiata Siena and yellow orche - I understand there are yellow and brown pigment in them, but I mean color difference. I have seen your PBk-videos, still have some doubts, so could you you please help ? Thanks Yasna
@@teohyc yeah, I understand... I mean the color that they produce, as I understand natural sienna is more golden like, while Amiata is yellowish... And I try to understand how differ color in Amiata and ochre - Which one is more yellowish?
@@feliciabalza7474 They are quite similar. Sienna seems to be more yellowish. But you won't be able to tell if you don't have them side by side to compare. Do check out the colour swatches on Jane Blundell's website janeblundellart.blogspot.com
I love using the Verona Gold Ochre, it is so beautiful and soft. So helpful to see similar colors side by side to choose wisely and not buy too many. Hope you’ll keep up this series! ❤️
Buy them all!! LOL! Ok, maybe not everyone is like me. I love this pigment from DS in ALL its variations, so I do, indeed, have them all. While they are all absolutely similar, there are subtle differences. The subtle differences can really make a huge difference in the moodiness (or lack thereof) in landscapes and seascapes, which is what I paint. I have both Verona Gold Ochre and Goethite on my main studio palette. I like the muted colors these make when mixed with blues and reds, but my favorite colors to mix these ochres with is PG7 or PB36. Truthfully, no one NEEDS them all. I just find them all to be beautiful.
I’m like you, and I already own many. But as you said, they each are uniquely beautiful and I can’t resist them ❤️
I just want to thank you, Teoh, for these comparisons, it's so helpful to look at these swatches and mixes before buying. I've gone back to view a few of these again.
PY43>PY42 in my book. It’s one of my favorite pigments. Thank you Teoh! I use them to paint sandy scenes and the hills here in winter when they are golden brown.
all my ochres and oxides use 42, so i have no idea what the difference could possibly be.
As I understand it, PY42 and PY43 are the same chemically, but PY42 is the synthetic version and PY43 is the natural version.
I love it already and I haven't watched it yet. COLOUR - yes! Keep bringing on the colour - we all need lots of colour right now :)
Hello Teoh, I have Verona gold on my palette, I love the natural greens and blues you can get.Your pigment seemed a bit over bound with Gum Arabic. As a rule I prefer transparent pigments but every color has its rightful place. Claudia.
Yellow Ochre kinda is an essential color for any subject on whether portrait or landscape.
You could mix your own ochres with just yellow and brown, but it's quicker to just have a golden blown color at your palette.
One artist named Anders Zorn used it along with just red, black, and white to paint portraits.
Thank you Teoh for your informative videos!
When I use my W&N Cotman sketchers box, I put the yellow ochre PY42 with viridian hue PG7 to mix all kinds of greens, and I love the peachy colours it gives with the reds. On its own I like raw sienna more. I bought the raw sienna PY43 by Rembrandt which I am now exploring.
I have to say that your limited palette videos are very inspiring and taught me so much!
This is very useful information excellently presented. Thanks.
I use Yellow Ochre straight from the tube, at most slightly tinted with something else, when I want a dull color. More often I use bright yellows. I paint abstracts.
I like how you don´t stay within the lines, like perfectly imperfect painting and sketches, to me that makes it more relaxing and enjoyable to keep practicing, also I really liked the burgundy, italian and brown ocre, very pretty colors :)
I LOVE YELLOW ORCHRE for its naturally sunny vibe. It's very handy to mix natural light flesh tones with any reddish color.
Thank you for this! There are so many paints to choose from, even if the pigment is the same, so it's really helpful to see how they compare.
I'm currently using W&N Gold Ochre (PY42) but I'll have to check these out!
I had a moment when you showed the Burgundy yellow ochre where I immediately went ??? "Burgundy isn't YELLOW??" - then my brain caught up and remembered that Burgundy is a place 🤦 it's called Bourgogne in Swedish, and I generally don't have occasion to talk about the region so I just think about the colour when I hear it in English 😅
Some of these names are actually names of places where the pigment is mined from.
@@teohyc yeah, my brain caught up to that a moment too late 😂 sometimes I just have a disconnect when processing multiple languages at once, I think.
I use a gold ochre with a granulating blue to get a great cool/warm blue/yellow mix rather than a green. What you see are the two granulation rather than a combination of the colors
Your video illustrates why I dislike DS paints. Most of the seem to have more binder than pigment, and it takes a lot of paint to get the same kind of saturation that you can get with other manufacturers (like Winsor Newton).
I like Daniel Smith's ochres because most of them are transparent, although I occasionally use my Winsor & Newton more opaque Yellow Ochre. I have Burgundy Yellow Ochre in a couple of travel palettes, it's easier to get a sunnier look for buildings when urban sketching. Thanks for comparing all these colors, it's helpful when choosing new versions!!
Some of those blends made some gorgeous neutrals!
8:40 what a BEAUTIFUL use of yellow ochre....your work is so INSPIRING!!!!!!!!!!😀
I'm a big fan of ochres and especially like Geothite (brownish ochre). I am drawn to muted colours more so than vibrant colours. Like to paint mostly birds and country scenes, barns etc. Stay well everyone and continue to social distance and heed the advice of your authorities.
Italian deep ochre is soo pretty 🥺
Yellow ochre is my favorite color, tranks for the video!
I am using a handmade french ochre and I love it and mostly use the color by itself. I sometimes mix it with purple/mauve to get a warm sandy greyish tone. I use it for skintones or evening skies
That Burgundy ochre is beautiful 😍 I'll have to look it up when Amazon start shipping to my country again 😂
8:13 this is my all time favorite limited palette video and now I have to watch it again:)
I wonder what paper did you used for the mixing!
Thanks for the video, Teoh, I use raw sienna as well. Ochres can be opaque at times which is a property i don't enjoy when painting over inks. All of these colors look rather beautiful though!
I do like the golden ochre from Winsor & Newton because it is a lovely lively gradating ochre. It is cheery and bright yet could be calmed down. Some ochres are too quite and just not very transparent so I do like DS yellow ochre for quietness but the other for sometimes even in botanicals. Hansa deep could be added also but it changes the gradations 😊
Thank you for this!
Hello Teoh,
It would be interesting if you could make some video explaining these pigments, i mean why its important, what to look for, how to compare, different binders etc.. Im not watercolour beginner but in these py... Im kinda lost. Like just some summary of all these things, if you already did some video about it im sorry.
Keep it up! :)
Just from the swatches Burgundy yellow ochre is my favorite I think
For whatever reason my Daniel Smith yellow Orche does a more chalky, opaque look which I keep trying to like the results over and over again but I think I give up. Lemon Yellow mixes nice and Quin Gold has a nice rusty look when I’m careful to not use too much. I used Raw Sienna yesterday and I need to do a pigment number comparison with that to PY 43. Thanks!!
There are some other brands of paint that have more transparent ochres, but you are right, raw sienna seems to be more transparent and mixes better.
So, so, beautiful.
I have yellow ochre and goethite on my palette. I like the lighter slate gray I can make from yellow ochre + ultramarine blue. I'd like to compare it to Daniel Smith Raw Sienna Light. I'm still trying to get used to goethite.
i rly like this series !!!
I used Yellow Ochre for landscapes. Now I use Raw Sienna and Burnt Umber a lot.
I had ordered the Goethite about a week ago. I am wondering in what specific areas I can use it. It is one of the first times I went out my usual palette. If you use it for specific mixes/things please let me know. I realize it is s granulating color. Thank you!
PY-43 and blue would be good got painting geodes. minerals
I have a really, really hard time rewetting PY43 and PY42 paints. I adore the color and find it incredibly useful so it's very frustrating!
Love your videos!
I don’t enjoy the ochres as they are not saturated enough & don’t ”flow” as well. That said, Burgundy yellow ochre seems to be the exception, & I’ve recently picked up a tube after I saw a paint out of it from DS
Thank you
Hey Teoh, didn’t you say at the end of the video you would sell some excess water color ? I’m interested but I can’t find a link or anything in the description:) maybe you can help
Thanks. Just added that www.parkablogs.com/content/watercolour-paint-sale
What do you do with all these different variants of color if they are not in you palettes?
I use them once in a while, for my limited colour palette series videos.
@@teohyc I love your limited palette sketches. I recently did a series of limited palettes but they were real funky colors and they turned out pretty weird
Hi Teoh and thanks for such informative video comparison...I d like to oder some earth DS paints , but cants clearly understand what is the difference between Monte Amiata Siena and yellow orche - I understand there are yellow and brown pigment in them, but I mean color difference. I have seen your PBk-videos, still have some doubts, so could you you please help ?
Thanks
Yasna
Monte Amiata is the name of a place. That’s where that particular Sienna comes from. Sienna and Ochres are just different types of earth.
@@teohyc yeah, I understand... I mean the color that they produce, as I understand natural sienna is more golden like, while Amiata is yellowish... And I try to understand how differ color in Amiata and ochre - Which one is more yellowish?
@@feliciabalza7474 They are quite similar. Sienna seems to be more yellowish. But you won't be able to tell if you don't have them side by side to compare. Do check out the colour swatches on Jane Blundell's website janeblundellart.blogspot.com
@@teohyc Thaaanks a lot 😄😄😄😄
We want a Procreate drawing mini series please :D &more book reviews
Good idea
Has six different colors of ochre from one brand alone
Admits he doesn't use any of them :-)