Description
- Yellow Ochre provides artists with earthtones from cream to brown.
- It has good hiding power, produces a quick drying paint, and can be safely mixed with other pigments.
- Its transparency varies widely from opaque shades to more transparent ones, which are valued for their use as glazes.
- If gypsum is present, Yellow Ochre is not suitable for frescoing. (See Brown Ochre, PY43.) PY42 is made from synthetic iron oxides.
- PY43 is made from natural iron oxide.
- Ochre comes from the Greek word ochros, meaning pale yellow. It was one of the first pigments to be used by human beings, and evidence of its use has been found at 300,000 year old sites in France and the former Czechoslovakia.