![]() ![]() you can add a touch and that and it will make your mix more opaque. but if you have those two pigments, try it for yourself. my mixes are not very neat, and were for my own purposes, but maybe i will post them tom. however, i don’t have cobalt teal blue in watercolor, and i think it is more opaque and purported to be a weak mixer. In my experiment in watercolor.thalo green blue shade + thalo blue green shade made a color that looked exactly like cobalt teal blue. And there’s the yellow shade too closer to pthalo yellow shade. Probably a good standard green replacement for pthalo pg7 or viridian. remember there’s the cobalt green variant too, got to get my hands on some. I do various paintings from night photography of city settings where its useful but i understand that’s not a common subject matter, its got quite an uncommon unnatural pallette. To me just a good visual opposite to pyrrol red if the intention is to burn retinas, but also makes a good CMY pallette. I use it quite a lot but in abstract settings and it worked pretty well in a limited pallette. Apart from the chroma its also very opaque and fast drying. I can’t really see it mixed from pg7 and 15:3 from colour wheels even with curved mixing lines taken into account as you’d have to add tons of white. ![]() So can it REALLY be mixed? or just mixed ‘enough for any practical use’. Don’t think it can be mixed, its pretty high chroma, i think the pthalo combination might get close but its more that many don’t need higher chroma or really notice with teal. ![]()
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