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Daniel Smith Extra Fine Gouache 15ml - Pyrrol Scarlet

Brand: DANIEL SMITH
Pyrrol Scarlet is a bright, tomato-red with excellent clarity and impact. Opaque and matte, it applies evenly and keeps color mixes clean, making it a powerful modern red for illustration and graphic work.
Availability: In stock
€22,30
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No matter your painting style—illustration, mixed media, art journaling or detailed studio work—Extra Fine Gouache delivers creative flexibility and precise control.

Apply it straight from the tube for rich, solid strokes with a velvety matte finish, or dilute it slightly to create softer lines and atmospheric layers. The paint mixes easily and responds well to scraping and texturing techniques.

Pyrrol Scarlet is a modern synthetic-organic pigment with a vivid tomato-red hue. While similar in tone to some Perylene reds, it disperses more evenly on paper, producing cleaner mixes and consistent coverage. Ideal for bold passages, high-contrast compositions and color work where purity matters.

👉 Features:

  • Type: Extra Fine Gouache (artist grade)
  • Pigment: PR 255
  • Series: 3
  • Lightfastness: Excellent
  • Staining: Medium Staining
  • Transparency: Opaque
  • Finish: Matte
  • Size: 15ml tube

Inspiration Tip:
Use Pyrrol Scarlet as a primary mixing red for clean blends, or pair it with Cobalt Blue to create vivid, high-chroma purples.

🎨 Gouache vs Tempera — a common confusion, two different media

Gouache and tempera are often confused, mainly because both are water-based and opaque. This confusion is understandable and has historical and linguistic roots. In practice, however, they are two distinct painting media, designed for different purposes and ways of working.

🔎 A bit of historical context

The word tempera comes from the Latin temperare, meaning “to mix.” Historically, it was used broadly to describe paints mixed with a binder. For many years, gouache was also referred to internationally as tempera gouache or opaque watercolor.

Over time, terminology became more specific.
Gouache evolved and established itself as a distinct fine art medium, while tempera gradually came to describe simpler, educational or craft-oriented paints. The confusion didn’t come from misuse, but from the natural evolution of materials and language.

🖌️ What is Gouache?

Gouache is a pigment-based, water-soluble paint made with gum arabic, much like watercolor — but with greater density and opacity.

In artist-grade gouache:

  • opacity comes from a high concentration of pigment
  • not from chalk or fillers
  • the result is a matte, clean and controlled finish

This is why gouache is widely used in illustration, urban sketching, botanical art, design and mixed media.

🎒 What is Tempera (in modern use)?

In contemporary usage, tempera usually refers to:

  • educational or craft paints
  • designed for easy, immediate application
  • formulated with different priorities than fine art paints

It is a perfectly valid medium for its intended purpose, but it serves different creative needs than gouache.

⚖️ The difference in practice

Gouache (artist-grade):

  • pure, high-quality pigments
  • predictable behavior
  • clean color mixing
  • ideal for learning, control and artistic development

Tempera (educational / craft):

  • simpler formulations
  • less precision in color behavior
  • designed for free, spontaneous use

🌱 Why this distinction matters

Understanding what each medium is helps artists and crafters use them more intentionally and creatively. Artist-grade materials like gouache are not “only for professionals” — they are tools that help creators at every level better understand color, layering and technique.

At Scraps n Pieces, we believe that the right materials make creativity clearer, more enjoyable and more meaningful — whether you’re an experienced artist, a beginner, or a child discovering the joy of making art.

In one sentence

Gouache and tempera are not competing terms — they are different tools with different roles.
Knowing the difference helps you create with confidence.

🎨 What are Daniel Smith Extra Fine Gouache?

Daniel Smith Extra Fine Gouache are professional, pigment-based paints made with pure pigments and gum arabic. They offer an opaque, matte finish with clarity and vibrancy, without chalk or fillers that dull color.

🔍 What makes them different from other gouache?

Their opacity comes from a high pigment load, not additives. This results in brighter color, cleaner mixing and a predictable, enjoyable painting experience.

💧 Can I use them with watercolor?

Absolutely. They work beautifully alongside watercolor, allowing you to add highlights, corrections and bold details while keeping the painting cohesive.

🧑‍🎨 Are they suitable for beginners?

Yes — and they are often the best way to learn. Artist-grade paints help beginners understand how color behaves: how it flows, mixes and reacts with water. Clean pigments and consistent behavior make learning more intuitive and enjoyable, for adults and children alike.

📄 What surfaces work best?

They perform beautifully on watercolor paper, sketchbooks and mixed media paper. Quality surfaces enhance control and overall results.

🔄 Can they be reworked after drying?

Yes. Like all gum arabic–based paints, they can be lightly reactivated with water, giving you flexibility for layering and adjustments.

🎯 How good is the coverage?

They offer strong coverage, often in a single pass. Used straight from the tube they are bold and opaque; diluted, they create softer layers without losing character.

🏙️ Are they good for illustration and urban sketching?

Absolutely. Their clean color, matte surface and control make them a favorite for illustrators, urban sketchers and journal artists.

🚀 How should I start?

Start simple: a small palette, a white and good paper. Experiment with water ratios and layering. Daniel Smith Gouache respond intuitively and reward exploration.

🎨 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.