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Amido black 10B: Amidoschwarz Naphthol blue black Acid black 1 20470 diazo 1064-48-8: Aniline black: Pigment black 1 Oxidation base 1 50440 azine 13007-86-8: Aniline Yellow: Sudan yellow R Induline R Solvent yellow 1 11000 azo 60-09-3: Anthracene blue SWR Alizarin blue 2RC Mordant blue 32 58605 anthraquinone 6372-24-6: Anthrapurpurin
Try some bright neon colors! This dye kit comes with 167 kooky neon stickers, including one that reads "Happy Easter" and the letters of the alphabet so you can customize your egg to your liking!
A dye is a colored substance that chemically bonds to the substrate to which it is being applied. This distinguishes dyes from pigments which do not chemically bind to the material they color. Dye is generally applied in an aqueous solution and may require a mordant to improve the fastness of the dye on the fiber.
Malachite green is traditionally used as a dye for materials such as silk, leather, and paper. Despite its name the dye is not prepared from the mineral malachite ; the name just comes from the similarity of color.
He played a known role in redefining painting in the 1950s and 1960s with what critics called zero-degree abstraction, but with maximal-ism in dazzling color combinations.
black walnut Black walnut (Juglans nigra) is a North American tree used to produce a deep brown dye approaching black.
In color theory, a shade is a pure color mixed with black. It decreases its lightness while nearly conserving its chromaticity. Strictly speaking, a "shade of black" is always a pure black itself and a "tint of black" would be a neutral gray. Unlike these, many off-black colors possess a hue and a colorfulness (also called saturation).
Colorants can be divided into pigments and dyes. Broadly, dyes are soluble and become fixed to a substrate via impregnation, while pigments are insoluble and require a binding agent to adhere to a substrate. Dyes, therefore, must have an affinity for the substance they are intended to color. [4]
Azo dyes are organic compounds bearing the functional group R−N=N−R′, in which R and R′ are usually aryl and substituted aryl groups. They are a commercially important family of azo compounds, i.e. compounds containing the C-N=N-C linkage. [1] Azo dyes are synthetic dyes and do not occur naturally.
Fuchsine. The first synthetic dye of the color fuchsia, called fuchsine, was patented in 1859 by François-Emmanuel Verguin. It was later renamed magenta, and became highly popular under that name. A sample of fuchsine dye in an aqueous solution. Crystals of fuchsine dye and the color they produce.