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InkShift - TACCIA benizakura to sabimidori


namrehsnoom

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InkShift – TACCIA benizakura to sabimidori
 
Just for the fun of it, I occasionally resume my project exploring what happens when you move progressively from one ink colour to another. My hope is that some of these "inkshifts" result in interesting colours that I can use to write/draw with. And besides... it's just fun to watch one ink colour morph into another one. 
 
TACCIA Utamaro benizakura is too bright a red for me. On its own I would probably not use the ink again, so I decided to tone it down a bit. Fellow member @InesF suggested I try to temper the ink by mixing it with TACCIA Hokusai sabimidori. That made me curious… I had no idea what that would do to the ink. Well, only one way to find out, and that is to do the inkshift experiment.


large.366656248_inkshift-benizakuratosabimidori300ppipt1.jpg.71eb92a71b406cb390fc05435fdea160.jpg

large.1757101020_inkshift-benizakuratosabimidori300ppipt2.jpg.a390605a5badc12e8a290c6ffc446ec2.jpg
 
In the span between the two starting inks some muted purples appear – ranging from rose-red to more of a violet blue. No great discoveries, although I like two of the mixes:

  • The mix with 10:1 of benizakura:sabimidori results in a soft rose-red that works much better for me than the bright benizakura original. That’s a mix I see myself using. 
  • The 1:5 mix of benizakura:sabimidori creates a nice muted violet-purple that I like a lot. But I enjoy the original sabimidori much more, and this mix would use up too much of that ink. So this mix is a no-go.

By now, I have a hunch that the brighter TACCIA asahanada (an indigo-blue ink) will react nicely with the blazing red benizakura. Maybe some more vibrant purples or violets? But that’s a topic for another inkshift experiment.

 

 

large.1934516024_inkshift-benizakuratosabimidori-chromaevolution.jpg.9a408ed0a6b320a654036baa9b13c730.jpg

 

Above, you can see the progression of the chromas from benizakura on the left to sabimidori on the right . It’s quite clear that benizakura dominates the spectrum.

 

 

large.2078730774_inkshift-benizakuratosabimidori-collage.jpg.911857ecb94cb62abf68cd541d2f3390.jpg

 

I continue to enjoy these ink morphing experiments. Fun adventures in ink-land, and more often than not you are rewarded with a mix that beats the original inks. Fun guaranteed!
 

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Very interesting!  I would NOT have expected that shift from the red at one end to the teal leaning blue-black at the other end to meet as purple (I would have expected it to have been a brown, because of the greenish cast of Sabimidori).

Ruth Morrisson aka inkstainedruth

"It's very nice, but frankly, when I signed that list for a P-51, what I had in mind was a fountain pen."

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WOW this is cool.

Fountain pens are my preferred COLOR DELIVERY SYSTEM (in part because crayons melt in Las Vegas).

Create a Ghostly Avatar and I'll send you a letter. Check out some Ink comparisons: The Great PPS Comparison 

Don't know where to start?  Look at the Inky Topics O'day.  Then, see inks sorted by color: Blue Purple Brown Red Green Dark Green Orange Black Pinks Yellows Blue-Blacks Grey/Gray UVInks Turquoise/Teal MURKY

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Thank you @namrehsnoom for this inkshift experiment and for even considering it. :thumbup:

 

Indeed, the dark blue obtained from this mixture is not so pure as expected from theory. It is still a surprising shift and my favourite is in the middle between the 1:1 and 1:2 benizakura : sabimidori mixture. However, solo sabimidori is the clear winner because of its uniqueness. :) 

The two blue areas top right and bottom right on the photo paper look amazing!

One life!

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