Description
Weld or Reseda has been used as a dye for millenia, from the robes of the Vestal Virgins in Rome to ancient Egyptian wool tapestries, interestingly until the 19th Century it was the most used yellow dye. Like most 'dyes' used as oil paint pigments here it is prepared as a 'lake' to help stabilize it.
In masstone it is darkish, yellow brown and feels quite unique not really having the 'bulk' of a average oil paint. It is very transparent and when thinly used the yellow aspect really comes out, as a mid value, warmish yellow.
As expected it has pretty low tinting power, however there are still a range of gentle yellow tints which can be produced, when Titanium white is added it also cools it quite dramatically. This is a subtle paint.
To me although from a different plant it feels quite similar in handling and colour to Stil de Grain (made from Buckthorn berries) and it is the same chemical compound in both plants which produces the yellow hue. The Weld plant is pictured above.
From artisanal crop cultivation using organic methods, no chemicals. The colour is expressed in small batches using traditional methods.
Technical Overview
Pigment - Weld/Reseda
Vehicle - Linseed Oil
Tint Power - Low
Opacity - Transparent
Munsell - Hue 2.5Y - Value 7 - Chroma 12
Wallace Seymour Paints