Potter’s Violet
Potter’s Violet
Couldn't load pickup availability
Share

Description
Potter’s Violet (PR233) is a handmade single-pigment chrome tin pink (often known as Potter’s Pink) formulated as a ceramic chrome–tin silicate pigment. It produces a soft, muted violet-rose with a gentle, smoky undertone and a delicately granulating masstone. Compared to modern organic violets and quinacridones, this pigment is lower in chroma and distinctly more mineral, offering a quiet, stone-like mauve rather than a high-intensity purple.
In use, Potter’s Violet gives a subtle, atmospheric color ideal for florals, weathered stone, old brick, dried leaves, skin tones, and gentle shadows in both landscape and figurative painting. It has low to moderate tinting strength with a semi-opaque, strongly granulating character, making it especially beautiful in textured washes and layered passages. It mixes beautifully with yellows for dusty peaches and muted earth oranges, with reds and violets for delicate mauves and rose-violets, and with blues and earth pigments for sophisticated, smoky neutrals and shadow tones that stay soft rather than harsh.
This chrome–tin silicate pigment is chemically inert, heat-resistant, and highly resistant to acids and alkalis, which makes it suitable across a wide range of binders and mediums. In artist’s colors it offers a distinctive, historical-feeling violet–pink that can function as a primary muted violet on the palette, a subtle alternative to bright modern purples, or a mixer for palettes that favor nuance, texture, and quiet, atmospheric color.
History
Chrome tin pink pigments were developed within the ceramic industry as stable, high-temperature stains for porcelain, tile, and glazes. By incorporating chromium into a tin–silicate matrix and firing at high temperatures, chemists created gentle pinks and mauves that could survive demanding kiln conditions without graying or burning out. From this family of ceramic colors came the pigment artists now know as Potter’s Pink and related chrome–tin pinks.
Originally used to give a soft rose tone to pottery and architectural ceramics, this pigment eventually made its way into artist paints, particularly in watercolor, where its granulating, low-chroma character became highly prized. Under names such as Potter’s Pink and Potter’s Violet, PR233 has gained a reputation as a connoisseur’s color—subtle, textural, and uniquely suited to delicate, atmospheric work and historical, earth-toned palettes.
Health and Safety
Precautions:
Keep out of reach of children and pets.
Do not consume.
Not for cosmetic or food usage.
Do not spray apply.
For further health information contact a poison control center.
Use care when handling dry pigments and avoid dust formation.
Use particular caution with fibrous, fine, or toxic pigments.
Do not eat, drink, or smoke near dry pigments.
Avoid breathing in pigment dust and use a NIOSH-certified dust respirator with sufficient rating for dry pigment.
Wash hands immediately after use or handling.
If dust is likely, always wear protective clothing to keep out of eyes, lungs, off skin, and out of any contact as well as keep area ventilated.
This product may contain chemicals known by the State of California to cause cancer, birth defects, or reproductive harm.
Warnings and bottle information are abbreviated.
Pigment Information
Pigment Type: Synthetic (Inorganic) chrome tin pink (ceramic silicate pigment)
Suitable Mediums: Watercolor, Oil, Tempera, Acrylic, Lime / Fresco, Ceramic and cement applications
Lightfastness: Best
Opacity: Semi-opaque, strongly granulating
Other Names: Potter’s Violet, Potter’s Pink, Chrome Tin Pink (PR233)
Color Index Code: PR233