Tierra de Cassel
Esquema
Jerarquía
<materiales por función> > colorante > pigmento > <pigmentos por color> > pigmento pardo > pigmento pardo orgánico
Descripción
A naturally occurring dark brown earth pigment containing organic humus, peat, or coal material mixed with iron oxides, alumina and silica. When ignited, the pigment leaves a soft gray residue. The colorant is fugitive and fades on exposure to strong light. The pigment was first used in the 17th century; early sources were from the Cologne and Kassel regions of Germany, thus the alternate pigment names. The brown earth has since been obtained from various localities each of which may differ slightly in color and composition. To add to this confusion some pigments labeled "Van Dyck brown" were bituminous while others were synthetically made from from carbon black and iron oxide mixtures. For these synthetic mixtures, use "synthetic Van Dyck brown."
URI original del concepto
Otros términos
- Van Dyck brown (pigment) [en]
- grijsbruin [nl]
- terre de Cassel [fr]
- Van Dyck Braun [de]
- terra di Cassel [it]
- Van Dyke brown (pigment) [en]
- Vandyke brown (pigment) [en]
- Cassel brown (pigment) [en]
- Cassel earth [en]
- Kassel earth [en]
- Castle earth [en]
- Cassler umbra [en]
- Cologne earth [en]
- bituminous earth (pigment) [en]
- humic earth [en]
- humic-earth pigment [en]
- Cullens earth [en]
- earth of cullen [en]
- Colens earth [en]
- Collens earth [en]
- terra di Colonia [en]
- moreno de Van Dyck [en]
- moreno de Van Dyck [es]
- Kasslerbraun [en]
- Kasslerbraun [de]
- brun Vandyck [fr]
- terre di Cassel [it]
- pardo Van Dyke [es]
- carmelita Van Dyck [es]