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History of the DEADLY Color Green | Sculpting a Garden Inspired by Scheele's and Paris Green

Life of a Paintbrush 323 lượt xem 1 year ago
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Since it's spooky season I thought I would dive into the creepy history behind the color green. In this video I'm sculpting a garden piece inspired by arsenic green aka Scheele's and Paris green. I'm using premo polymer clay for this garden, along with black and gold pigments from Eye Candy Pigments. If you like history, weird facts and watching someone's hands make stuff... subscribe! 💚💚💚

My website and art shop: https://www.lifeofapaintbrush.com

Materials I use (Amazon affiliate links):
Pan Pastels and other supplies to color clay: https://amzn.to/3Zz9kOI
Polymer clay I use: https://amzn.to/3tfaEu7
Polymer clay tools: https://www.amazon.com/shop/lifeofapaintbrush/list/1P4FO9MUPCKZS?ref_=cm_sw_r_cp_ud_aipsflist_aipsflifeofapaintbrush_HV201KRHXSDEVHJMTSKN

Image credits: Open Culture, Chris Goulet at English Wikipedia, Winterthur Museum, The Paris Review

Music credit: 'Feretory' by Anthony Earls, 'Mysterious Moments' by Eneide

#art #polymerclay #victorian #artist #clayart #clay #history

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