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Daniel Smith Extra Fine Watercolor Tube - Cerulean Blue Chromium

Brand: DANIEL SMITH
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Cerulean Blue Chromium by Daniel Smith is a classic, permanent sky blue watercolor with strong granulation and low staining strength. Semi-transparent and highly controllable, it’s ideal for skies, atmospheric landscapes and expressive wet-on-wet or underpainting techniques, delivering natural texture and depth on paper.
Availability: In stock
€11.60
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Cerulean Blue Chromium (PB 36) is a permanent watercolor pigment known for its distinctive granulation and soft sky-blue tone. It performs beautifully on its own and becomes especially expressive when combined with transparent colors.

This pigment excels in wet-on-wet and underpainting techniques, particularly when paired with Quinacridone Gold or Quinacridone Burnt Orange, creating organic textures reminiscent of mosses and lichens. Combined with Buff Titanium, Undersea Green and touches of Lunar Black, it produces misty landscapes and deep atmospheric effects.

Its semi-transparent nature and low staining strength allow for layering, lifting and subtle corrections, while excellent lightfastness ensures long-term stability in finished artwork.

👉 Features:

  • Series: 2
  • Pigment: PB 36
  • Lightfastness: I – Excellent
  • Transparency: Semi-Transparent
  • Staining: Low
  • Granulation: Granulating
  • Format: 5ml or 15ml tube

👍 Ideal for:

  • Textured skies and clouds
  • Atmospheric and misty landscapes
  • Wet-on-wet and underpainting techniques
  • Organic textures and foliage

Inspiration Tip:

Use Cerulean Blue Chromium on damp paper and let granulation create natural texture and depth with minimal effort.

🎓 How to Understand and Work with Daniel Smith Extra Fine Watercolors

Daniel Smith Extra Fine Watercolors are not designed to behave uniformly — and that is entirely intentional. This range is built to reveal the true character of each pigment, not to smooth it out. To use them effectively, the first step is understanding how the color itself thinks.



🧬 Pigment always comes first

At the core of Daniel Smith watercolors lies the pigment. Many colors in the range are mono-pigment, meaning they are made from a single pigment only. This matters in practice: mixtures stay clean, results are more predictable, and muddy colors are easier to avoid.

When choosing a color, do not focus solely on its name or appearance. Observe how the pigment behaves on paper and in water.



🌊 Color behavior: granulation and staining

Every pigment has its own behavior. Some granulate strongly, creating texture and movement on the paper. Others are more staining, binding deeply to the surface and resisting lifting. There are also softer, more transparent pigments, ideal for glazing and layered work.

Daniel Smith does not try to equalize these properties. They allow them to remain visible, so you can decide how to use them.



🧪 Specialized ranges and their role

The range includes distinct pigment families, each serving a specific purpose:

  • PrimaTek: mineral-based pigments with strong granulation and organic texture
  • Luminescent & Iridescent: light-reactive colors that add glow and visual depth
  • Classic and modern pigments: the foundation for controlled palettes and clean mixes

You do not need everything. You need what supports the way you work.



🎨 Building a palette with intention

Daniel Smith watercolors perform best when used thoughtfully. A small, well-understood palette is often more powerful than a large, unfocused collection.

Start with a limited selection, observe how pigments interact, and add new colors only when you understand what is missing from your process.



🧾 Test before committing

Dot Cards and small paper tests are the most effective way to choose colors. The same pigment can behave very differently depending on paper, water ratio, and brush.

What matters most is how the color works for you.




Inspiration Tip

Do not try to fully control the color. Observe the pigment and let it show you what it can do. Once you understand its behavior, true collaboration begins.

🎨 Granulation & Texture: when, how and why

Granulation is not a decorative effect. It is a natural behavior of certain pigments, and when understood, it becomes a powerful expressive tool rather than a visual gimmick.

Some pigments are heavier, irregular in shape, or naturally resistant to dissolving evenly in water. Instead of spreading smoothly, they settle into the texture of the paper, creating visible variation, depth, and movement. Daniel Smith watercolors are known for allowing this behavior to remain honest and visible.



🪨 When to use granulation

Granulation works best when you want to suggest texture, atmosphere, or natural complexity. It is particularly effective in:

  • landscapes (stone, earth, foliage, skies)
  • architectural details
  • abstract or expressive passages
  • backgrounds that benefit from visual depth

It is less useful when you need flat, graphic color or sharp, controlled edges.



🌊 How granulation behaves

Granulating pigments respond strongly to:

  • paper texture (rough and cold press enhance the effect)
  • water ratio (more water allows particles to separate and settle)
  • gravity and tilt (pigments move and collect naturally)
  • layering (granulation often increases in wet-on-wet work)

This behavior cannot be fully controlled — and that is the point. You guide it, you don’t dominate it.



🖌️ How to work with granulating colors

To work effectively with granulation:

  • allow washes to stay wet longer
  • avoid overworking the surface
  • let gravity and water do part of the work
  • observe how pigments settle before intervening

Granulating colors reward patience. Interfering too much often breaks the effect.



🧠 Why granulation matters

Granulation introduces unpredictability, but also authenticity. It mirrors the irregularity found in nature and removes the “flatness” that can occur with overly controlled painting.

When used intentionally, granulation adds character and emotional weight. It creates moments that feel organic, unforced, and alive.




Inspiration Tip

Do not try to “use” granulation. Create the conditions for it to appear, then step back and let it speak.

🎨 Why artist-grade materials matter

Artist-grade doesn’t mean “only for professionals.”
It means cleaner materials, predictable behavior and a better creative experience — for everyone.

When you work with artist-grade paints, it’s easier to understand:

  • how color flows
  • how it mixes
  • how it reacts to water and paper

This makes the creative process clearer, more enjoyable and far less frustrating.

🧠 Better materials = better learning

Artist-grade materials use pure pigments, not fillers that dull or distort color.
What you see on the paper is real color behavior — not a compromise.

This helps:

  • beginners learn with confidence
  • crafters grow creatively
  • artists work with control

🎨 It’s not about level — it’s about experience

You don’t have to “earn” good materials.
Good materials are the ones that:

  • teach you the medium
  • encourage experimentation
  • make you want to keep creating

That’s why children, beginners and hobby creators often benefit even more from artist-grade supplies.

🌱 Creating without friction

When the material works as it should:

  • you stop fighting the paint
  • you stop questioning yourself
  • you enjoy the process

Creation becomes play, learning and expression — all at once.

Our philosophy at Scraps n Pieces

At Scraps n Pieces, we believe that:

artist-grade materials don’t just elevate results —
they elevate the joy of creating.

And that joy should be accessible to everyone.