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Lead-Tin Orange (100 g)

Lead-Tin Orange (100 g)
ITEM NO.: 447-11B
MANUFACTURER: Rublev Colours
CATEGORY: Pigments
LIST PRICE:$49.50
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Product Details:

100 g jar (3.53 oz)
Lead-tin orange is an artificial pigment made by heating lead and tin oxide together and is a reddish hue of lead-tin yellow (type I), which frequently occurs in European painting before the 18th century.

Pigment Names
Current
Names:
English: lead-tin orange
French: orange de plomb étain
German: Blei-Zinn Orange
Italian: arancione di piombo-stagno
Spanish: anaranjado de plomo-estano

Origin and History
Lead-tin yellow frequently occurs in European painting before the 18th century. The earliest recipes for a yellow pigment from lead and tin was found in the Bolognese manuscript from the first half of the fifteenth century. Old Italian manuscripts make reference to a pigment of pale yellow color called giallolino or giallorino while northern manuscripts use the term massicot (which now designates yellow lead oxide) to describe a pigment prepared from lead and tin.

Source
There are, in fact, two types of lead-tin yellow, designated as types I and II. Type I is lead-tin oxide and is most frequently found on old paintings. Type II is a second variety of lead-tin oxide that may contain free tin oxide and additional silicon. Lead-tin yellow (type I) is prepared by heating a mixture of lead and tin dioxides to a temperature of about 800° C. Warmer hues of yellow appear at lower temperatures and at about 700–800° C., the more reddish-colored hues develop.

Permanence and Compatibility
Lead-tin orange is not affected by light and is stable under normal atmosphere. Due to the presence of lead it may darken by atmospheric hydrogen sulfide and is therefore more permanent in oil than in watercolor. On paintings, lead-tin yellow (type I) has been found mixed with lead white, vermilion, yellow lakes, ochres, verdigris, indigo and azurite.

Oil Absorption and Grinding
Lead-tin orange absorbs a small amount of oil (16 g oil per 100 g of pigment). It has a strong drying effect on oil paint.

Toxicity
Lead-tin orange contains lead and is rated highly toxic, especially with prolonged ingestion or inhalation. Utmost care should be used in handling the dry powder pigment to avoid breathing the dust. It is only moderately toxic in contact with the skin.


Pigment: Lead-Tin Orange
Pigment Information
Color: Orange
Colour Index: -
Chemical Name: Lead-Tin Oxide
Chemical Formula: Pb2SnO4
ASTM Lightfastness Rating
Acrylic: Not Tested
Oil: Not Tested
Watercolor: Not Tested
Properties
Specific Gravity:
Hardness:
Refractive Index:
Oil Absorption: 16.74 g oil/100 g pigment


Read cautions about handling pigments

Read the Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS) for this Product

Read more about this color

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