How To Identify Pigment Rocks?

A short tutorial on how to identify pigment rocks.

There are many different sources for I can use for pigments, including plants, clay, soil, bones, and rocks. Most of the plants aren’t lightfast, so I don’t use many of those, but the main source for my Paleo Paints is rocks. While rocks may be plentiful and easy to find wherever you are, not all of them are good for, or easy to work with, for making pigments. Sometimes there is good color in very hard rocks, but the pigment rocks I like using the most are soft enough to be able to grind down into fairly fine powders that can easily be washed and separated for nice, smooth paints.

But do I go around whilly-nilly testing just any rock, plucking them off the ground or out of the creek at random? Sometimes… lol. But not *usually*. Sometimes I do test rocks at random. But there is at least a little method to my madness. I’ve never tried to explain it to anyone before, though, so feel free to comment with questions if I didn’t answer yours.

Here’s my How-To for Identifying Pigment Rocks

Total Time Needed :

10 Minutes, once on location.

Total Cost:

0 USD

Required Tools:

– your hands– your eyes– rocks– water

Things Needed?

– rocks– water

Steps to Testing Rocks:

Felkins creek is where I gather a lot of my pigments. Our own little creek feeds into this one.

Find a source

Go to a place that has rocks. I go to our creek. Sedimentary rocks are most often the kind that makes good pigment rocks for me here at Wild Ozark. Sandstone rocks are a good start. Shale works, too. Look around at the rocks.

Pigment rocks after prying out of the dirt.

Look for color

When the rocks are wet, like if they’re actually in the water, the color is easier to see. But you can still find color in dry rocks too. The ones in my hand have a nice terra-cotta color to them even though they’re not wet. We will wet them in the next step, though. Head over to the water.

Very rich in deep, rusty red pigment.

Test your rock

Wet the rock you want to test and then rub it on a larger rock. Does it leave a nice streak of color? The more easily it leaves color, the richer your resulting pigment will be. If it only scratches the larger rock and doesn’t leave color, then throw it out. If it scratches white, unless you’re testing limestone, throw it out. You want a test that produces lots of easy color. Have fun!

Here’s a video that shows how I do it. You’ll probably get a good laugh out of it, if nothing else.

Want More?

I host foraging hikes here at Wild Ozark just to demonstrate how to pick good rocks for making paint, and more in-depth workshops at my studio in Alpena, AR.

Making Handmade Watercolor Paint from Rocks

If you’ve found some rocks you want to make paint from and need a tutorial, click through to my pages on making handmade watercolor paint. Here’s a few:

I sell things here, too, like actual rocks, pigments ready to start with the washing stage, pigments already washed, watercolor binder, and paints already made.

If you’d like to see the art I’ve created using our Ozark pigments, check out my portfolio page.

Contact Mad Rox: (479) 409-3429 or madison@madisonwoods and let me know which hat I need to put on 🙂 Madison for art, Roxann for real estate, lol. Or call me Mad Rox and have them both covered!

https://www.youtube.com/@wildozark

Comments

9 responses to “How To Identify Pigment Rocks?”

  1. […] Read this one if you’d like to know How to Identify Pigment Rocks […]

  2. Cathy Avatar
    Cathy

    My jaw is on the ground. I live on a ginormous sandstone karst formation and it would NEVER have occurred to me to grab those rocks and test them for color. And I mean NEVER. The yellow and blue you show are beautiful! I love rocks and if there’s one thing Kentucky is full of, it’s rocks.

    1. Madison Avatar

      Hi Cathy! I’m so excited to have given you a jaw-dropping experience, then!! Now, everywhere you look, imagine the rainbow of colors that are possible 😀 I don’t have any blue rocks out here, unfortunately, but have found a flower petal that offers a long-lived pigment, at least. I think in KY you will have a lot of options to explore. Please keep me posted!

  3. Clare Avatar

    I have made regular watercolor paints and now I want to venture into more rock based paints. Our local creek is near an old brick factory site so I want to try and make some pigments from the brick remnants. Your website is very interesting and informative, so thanks!

    1. Madison Avatar

      Hi Clare, old bricks make gorgeous paints, so you’ll have a good resource there! Thanks for dropping by and leaving a comment 😀

  4. janet Avatar

    It’s the finding water here that would hold up the process, Madison. 🙂

    1. Madison Avatar

      True! There are good rocks for pigments out there, though. I guess I’d be scratching them dry to see what happened, lol!

  5. Judiann Edwards-Burrus Avatar
    Judiann Edwards-Burrus

    Madison, it sounds like a great idea to offer an online class. Personally, I can’t do them due to our slow server, no microphone and camera, but it would be really nice for those who can. Good luck. I’ll share on Facebook, and hope you get a lot of feedback.

    1. Madison Avatar

      Thanks Judiann. The slow internet is going to be a problem for me, too. I can do Zoom meetings and Google Hangouts, so I think the format will be video modules with weekly live meetings for Q & A. Undecided about whether to publish a workbook or not, but I may do that eventually. Right now I’m thinking of ways to do it, and seeing if there’ll be enough interest to make it work the time it’ll take to put something together. LOL, just making a blog post takes half a day or more, with the slow internet. But except for the weekly meetings, once the course is created, it’s done.

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