Colour charts - and colour charts for pastels
Colour charts are available in a number of different ways.
- printed - needs to be matched to CMYK colours to get the colours right
- digital file - to be viewed on screen hence needs to be matched to the RGB colours (but then it will be wrong if printed out as it won't be set up for a CMYK colour scheme!)
- handmade - "as is"
Inevitably, a printed colour chart is easy to produce but does not always match up with real colour. This is one of the reasons why Old Holland Oil Colours have a hand painted colour strip on each tube of paint - so that the purchaser of an expensive paint can see the real colour when laid down. It's why some manufacturers produce hand-coloured paint charts.
However when it comes to pastels there's a problem. A hand-coloured chart cannot be stored either by the retailer or the consumer as the pastel will be rubbed off. One pinned up in a studio will come to no harm - but these are probably best produced by the artist for the colour range they use.
Unison Pastel Colour Charts
Normally I access colour charts for Unison Pastels by looking at their website. Unison have colour charts available as a printed chart (which you can obtain by emailing them) and on-screen colour indexed charts. Both sets of charts are for their:
Unison Pastels - Colour Charts |
- Orange 1-18
- Red 1-18
- Red Earth 1-18
- Yellow 1-18
- Brown Earth 1-18
- Green 1-36
- YGE 1-18
- BGE 1-18
- Blue Green 1-18
- Blue Violet 1-18
- Grey 1-36
- Additional 1 - 18
- Additional 19-54
- Dark 1-18
- Light 1-18
- Special Collection
- Portrait 1-12
- Turquoise 1-6
- Natural Earth 1-18
- Heavenly Shadows
Selection Sets
- Starter 8
- Portrait 8
- Landscape 8
- Bright 8
- Light 8
- Dark 8
- Starter 18
- Portrait 18
- Landscape 18
- Starter 36
- Portrait 36
- Landscape 36
- Starter 72
- Landscape 72
- Portrait 72 (UK & EUROPE)
Half Stick Sets
Retailers' sets
I never buy retailer's sets unless I can see the index number itemised for every colour in the set - on the basis I've probably already got them!
JACKSON ARTS
A couple of special selection sets are available via Jackson Art where they provide good images of the colours - but no listing as to the index numbers of the colours chosen.
John's Set is apparently a set of the last colours that John Hersey made prior to his death.
The Ann Oram Set of 30 Half Sticks is new and you can read about it here on the Jackson Arts Blog - New Ann Oram Unison Soft Pastels Set. Ann Oram taught a still life worksop at Unison's in Northumberland in 2012.
Colour Chart by photograph: Unison Pastels - Southwest Colors |
DICK BLICK
Dick Blick in the USA are excellent at listing the sets and associated index numbers of all pastels in each set that they stock. They also list a number of sets which are available in the USA but not in the UK (see below)
Colour charts are available via photographs of the different sets in which the colour index number can be clearly seen. I'm not sure they have photographs for all the sets they retail.
Here, for example is the Southwest Colors set which is one I nearly bought in 2006 when making a trip out to the South Western States of the USA (see USA Sketchbook - Southwestern States (2006))
The sets they list include:
Portrait Colors: African American | Asian | Caucasian | Latino | Mediterranean | Native American | Portrait Eye Colors
Landscape Colors: Desert Sunset | Northern Sunrise | Polar Ocean | Tropical Ocean | Southwest Colors (includes the Turquoise set of 6)
Artists Colors: Brenda Mattson Portrait
JACK RICHESON
Jack Richeson has a printed color chart of all 402 colours (pdf file) that he stocks. He uses it to relate the Unison names for Colour Sets to the sets he stocks. On screen it looks like a pretty good match with the colours in the Unison sets.
Glyn Rand Colour Charts
This morning I discovered the existence of the handmade laminated colour charts for Unison Pastels made by Glyn Rand. He emphasises that his product is neither affiliated to Unison Colour, nor is it endorsed by them.
A handmade chart gets round the difficulties associated with the RGB/CMYK processes which have to translate colour in reality into another medium of vision or print.
By completing the charts using the pastels and then laminating the charts, these should in theory be the best match with various Unison Pastels.
However there is a BUT....
Actually there are two BUTs....
Unison Pastels - Glyn Rand Colour Charts (Size A3 x 3) |
The "But" is because my conclusion about this product is essentially "Nice idea, shame about the execution - and the price".
Why?
BUT.... #1
Well, the charts are NOT set up diagrammatically to provide a clear index of each 18 colour set. Instead of 18 colours in a vertical column Glyn has chosen to go with just 16. This means that:
- the colour sets are spread across different columns.
- all the values are mixed up. If looking for a light tone and colour you can't scan the bottom of the chart and the light set - as the lights are all over the place.
In fact every pastel artist I've ever known had all their pastels organised on two dimensions - by colour and tone. I can't think of any reason why any of them would want a colour chart which wasn't organised in the same way.
BUT.... #2
Personally I think the price of £30 for the three charts is a bit steep when one considers that a laminating machine for A3 paper only costs around about £30 on Amazon! I don't think a product should ever prompt one to think about buying the kit required to produce the end product rather than the product itself!
If you've already got a lot of Unison Pastels - as I have - I'm drawn to conclude that :
- if you're not bothered by tonal values being all mixed up and don't think you'd have any use for a laminating machine - have a think about the charts
- produce your own if:
- you don't like your tonal values mixed up.....
- and/or think you could find a laminating machine useful
More about Pastels
You can read more about Pastels on my websites
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