Colour: Making and Using Dyes and Pigments
By (Author) Franois Delamare
By (author) Bernard Guineau
Thames & Hudson Ltd
Thames & Hudson Ltd
23rd January 2001
27th November 2000
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Dyestuffs, pigments and paint technology
667.209
Paperback
160
Width 125mm, Height 180mm
240g
Colour is all around us; we take it for granted as a naturally occurring aspect of all things. Yet colours are also manufactured, and the science of pigments, hues and dyes has an ancient and fascinating history.
What were the colours of Ancient Egypt What did its artists use to paint their magnificent frescoes Where do indigo and ochre come from Why is purple the colour of royalty What are pastels How many colours are there Why do we dye our food Who invented ink What are white and black made of What is the symbolism of yellow
From the 40,000-years-old painted caves at Lascaux to the medieval cloth trade that enriched Europe, to the synthetic chemistry of today, the history of colour making has a central place in our lives. This book surveys the history of dyes and pigments, the invention of new colours and the industries that were fuelled by them.
Francois Delamare is a specialist in the surface properties of materials and was Director of Research at the Centre for the study of the structure of materials at the Ecole des Mines, Paris. Bernard Guineau is an Academic specializing in the history of colour from antiquity to the present. He is also a pioneer in the application of physico-chemical methods to pigments and old dyes.