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Classical Pigment Pairings

Here's a comprehensive breakdown organized by pairing type, with transparency/opacity for each pigment.


The Logic of Classic Pairings

Mixing complements — two paints from roughly opposite sides of the color wheel — can produce pure grays or achromatic neutrals. These pairs are invaluable for mixing dark neutrals and as signposts for color design decisions. Most classic pairings exploit this: two pigments that together span warm-to-cool, light-to-dark, and chromatic-to-neutral across their full mixing range.


The Essential Classic Pairs

🔵🟤 Ultramarine Blue + Burnt Sienna

The single most universally useful pairing in watercolor. Together they produce luminous warm and cool grays, rich darks, and anything from sky blue to earthy brown.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
French UltramarinePB29TransparentGranulating, warm blue
Burnt SiennaPBr7TransparentWarm red-orange earth

This is the universal shadow gray — Burnt Sienna + Ultramarine is one of the most useful mixes in watercolor. Add more blue for slate grays and dark blues; add more sienna for warm browns; mix 50/50 for a rich chromatic black.


🔵🟠 Ultramarine Blue + Burnt Umber

A darker, cooler version of the above. Produces some of the deepest near-blacks in watercolor.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
French UltramarinePB29Transparent
Burnt UmberPBr7Semi-transparentDarker, cooler than Burnt Sienna

Great for shadows, tree bark, architecture, and deep glazing darks. A workhorse for Sargent-style dark backgrounds.


🔵🟡 Prussian Blue + Raw Sienna (or Yellow Ochre)

Homer's essential pairing. Earthy, naturalistic greens and olive tones across the full value range.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
Prussian BluePB27Semi-transparentDeep, greenish cool blue; high tinting strength
Raw SiennaPBr7TransparentWarm golden yellow-brown
Yellow OchrePY43Semi-opaqueMuted earthy yellow

Mix toward blue for deep forest shadows; toward yellow for sunlit meadows and late-afternoon water. Homer used Prussian Blue as nearly his entire blue range.


🩷🟢 Quinacridone Rose + Phthalo Green (or Viridian)

The modern luminous complementary pair. Across their mixing range: vivid pinks/magentas → warm grays → rich forest greens.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
Quinacridone RosePV19TransparentBrilliant cool pink; lightfast
Phthalo Green BSPG7TransparentIntense; needs restraint in mixing
ViridianPG18TransparentSofter, cooler green; more controllable than Phthalo

Pairing Ruby Red (PV19) with Phthalo Green produces a range of gentle grays and browns that can replace pre-mixed neutral pigments entirely. Use Viridian if Phthalo feels too aggressive.


🔴🔵 Alizarin Crimson (or Quinacridone) + Phthalo Blue (or Cobalt)

The classic purple/violet mixing pair, also capable of deep warm darks.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
Permanent Alizarin CrimsonPR206 (DS) / PV19+PR177 (W&N)TransparentModern lightfast version
Quinacridone MagentaPR122TransparentCleaner purples than alizarin
Phthalo Blue GSPB15:3TransparentCool, green-leaning; brilliant purples
Cobalt BluePB28Semi-transparentGentler; granulating; more neutral purples

🟡🟣 New Gamboge + Ultramarine (or Dioxazine Violet)

Warm yellow paired with violet for deep shadows, muted greens, and autumn tones.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
New GambogePY153TransparentWarm orange-yellow
Dioxazine VioletPV23TransparentVery high tinting strength; deep blue-violet

Use tiny amounts of violet — it's powerful. Together they produce rich olive greens and deep warm shadows.


🟡🔵 Hansa Yellow + Phthalo Blue GS

The modern split-primary "clean green" pair. Produces brilliant, fresh greens impossible to achieve with opaque yellows.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
Hansa Yellow MediumPY97TransparentClean warm yellow; no chalkiness
Phthalo Blue GSPB15:3TransparentIntense; mix sparingly toward yellow

For those wanting transparent mixing, Nickel Azo Yellow (PY150) — sold as Transparent Yellow by W&N and Schmincke — is an excellent option for clean, luminous greens.


🟠🔵 Transparent Pyrrol Orange + Cobalt Blue

Orange and blue complements for warm shadows, skies, and skin tones.

PigmentCodeTransparencyNotes
Transparent Pyrrol OrangePO71TransparentBrilliant warm orange; DS exclusive
Cobalt BluePB28Semi-transparentGranulating; gentle neutralizer

Their mid-mix produces soft peachy neutrals ideal for flesh tones and stone.


Transparency / Opacity Quick Reference

CategoryTransparentSemi-TransparentSemi-Opaque / Opaque
BluesPhthalo Blue, Ultramarine, Indanthrone, Prussian Blue (semi)Cobalt Blue, Prussian BlueCerulean Blue
RedsQuinacridone Rose, Quinacridone Magenta, Permanent AlizarinCadmium Red (semi)Cadmium Red, Vermilion
YellowsHansa Yellow, New Gamboge, Nickel Azo YellowCadmium Yellow, Yellow Ochre, Naples Yellow
GreensPhthalo Green, ViridianHooker's GreenChromium Oxide Green
Earth TonesBurnt Sienna, Raw SiennaBurnt Umber, Raw UmberYellow Ochre, Indian Red
VioletsDioxazine Violet, Quinacridone Violet

The Key Principle

Many painters find that mixing too many pigments produces mud. With a well-chosen palette, generally two — but at most three — colors can create any hue you want. The classic pairings above work because each partner is a single pigment, biased toward its complement, allowing clean mixes all the way to neutral gray or dark. Stacking opaque pigments on top of each other is what kills luminosity — keeping your pairs transparent is the way to preserve that characteristic watercolor glow.