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Daniel Smith Extra Fine Gouache 15ml - Wisteria

Brand: DANIEL SMITH
Wisteria is a soft lavender with a subtle red undertone, inspired by wisteria blossoms. Opaque and matte, it blends smoothly and lifts easily, making it perfect for delicate florals and pastel palettes.
Availability: In stock
€19.90
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Wisteria offers a gentle, controlled painting experience thanks to its non-staining nature. It spreads evenly, softens effortlessly and allows for smooth transitions without locking into the paper.

Used at full strength, it delivers a calm lavender surface with a matte finish; diluted, it opens into tender pastel tones. This makes it especially well suited for floral subjects—such as orchids—along with highlights, soft details and romantic compositions where subtlety and elegance matter.

Features

  • Type: Extra Fine Gouache (artist grade)
  • Pigments: PW 6, PR 122
  • Series: 2
  • Lightfastness: Very Good
  • Staining: Non-Staining
  • Transparency: Opaque
  • Finish: Matte
  • Size: 15ml tube

Inspiration Tip:
Use it for petals and soft florals, or mix it with Titanium White to create luminous pastel lavenders with a silky feel.

🎨 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.