Free Delivery when you spend over £50*
*Free delivery within the UK (excluding the Channel Islands) when the order is over £50*
Indigo is just one of the bright and exquisite Professional Watercolours from A J Ludlow. This Special Limited Edition watercolour has excellent permanence and light fastness, ensuring that this watercolour’s properties are exceptional. As with all our fine-art materials, Indigo watercolour is lovingly handmade in the UK by a skilled artisan from the best ingredients and finest pigments.
Indigo professional quality watercolour is supplied in a 15ml glass jar, because:
But more importantly, there is no need for unnecessary additives or formulation changes to make processing in our colour manufacturing workshop easier, allowing the Indigo watercolour made by A J Ludlow, to be at the highest pigment concentration and the pigment’s unique properties to be uncompromised. Anything less would be at odds with the brilliance and performance demanded of a professional quality watercolour range.
The pigments used in this Professional Watercolour have been selected for their purity, high tinctorial strength, exceptional transparency, light fastness and very attractive blue colour, with an identical hue to the colour of indigo dyestuff. It affords a transparent watercolour (as can be seen in the figure 1a below).
Figure 1: Assessment of (a) the opacity/transparency and (b) staining power of A J Ludlow Indigo Professional Watercolour*.
The Indigo Blue watercolour does not lift out completely (as can be seen in figure 1b above) and so has a propensity to stain the watercolour paper slightly.
This watercolour has a slightly structured consistency, but is easily transferred from the jar to the watercolour palette using a clean spatula or palette knife. As with all the Professional Watercolours from A J Ludlow, once water is added, this watercolour has excellent flow and is a joy to paint with.
Pigment Details: Mixed
Footnote:
*Details of how each watercolour is tested are given in the May 2021 ARTicle “Testing and Assessing the Properties of Watercolours – Part 1 ” (see also Part 2 of the ARTicle, which was published in June 2021).