Description
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Very similar to the white used by Velazquez and Rembrandt, a painter's white. Known as lootwit in the seventeenth century.
Rublev's description;
"Ceruse is a semi-opaque mixture of lead white and calcite ground in walnut oil, it is used for translucent white effects and soft tints when mixed with other colours.
Ceruse is made with lead white and a medium dry ground calcite (the calcium carbonate mineral) that has a low oil absorption rate like that of lead white to maintain the quick drying character of lead white. Calcite is semi-transparent in oil, giving ceruse its soft white character. In the seventeenth century, this mixture of lead white and calcite was favored as a mixing white by artists such as Rembrandt, and was known as lootwit in Dutch.
In the 19th century, the name Ceruse was used for white pigments that contained lead and chalk."
Technical Overview
Pigment - PW1 & Calcite
Opacity - Semi-Opaque
Binder - Linseed Oil
Drying Time - Medium