Payne's grey
Noun 1. A specific pigment color: Payne's grey is a dark greyish-blue pigment, originally a mixture, used primarily in painting. It is known for creating subtle, cool grey tones and is often employed for shading, underpainting, or creating atmospheric effects.
Payne's grey is used as a noun to refer to the pigment itself or the specific color it produces. * The artist mixed Payne's grey with white to create the shadows on the clouds. * For the moody seascape, she used a palette dominated by Payne's grey and muted greens. * Payne's grey is a staple on many watercolorists' palettes for its versatility in creating depth.
- As a color descriptor: The term can be used adjectivally to describe objects of a similar color, though this is an extension of its primary meaning as a pigment name.
- The mountains appeared in the distance, a Payne's grey silhouette against the twilight sky.
- Payne's gray: An alternative spelling, more common in American English.
- Grey / Gray: The neutral color between black and white.
- Pigment: A substance used for coloring or painting.
- Azure: A bright blue color, often contrasted with the muted tone of Payne's grey.
- Slate: A dark bluish-grey color, similar to but often more purely grey than Payne's grey.
- Charcoal grey: A very dark grey, but typically without the blue undertone.
- Slate grey: A dark bluish-grey, the closest common color synonym.
Payne's grey is a specific term from the visual arts, particularly painting. Its defining characteristic is its unique greyish-blue hue. It is not a general term for any grey-blue color but specifically refers to this historical pigment mixture and the distinct color associated with it.
- any pigment that produces a greyish to dark greyish blue