Cadmium yellow degradation afflicts numerous paintings realized between the XIXth and XXth centuries. The degradation process and its kinetics is not completely understood. It consists of chalking, lightening, flaking, spalling, and, in its most deteriorated cases, the formation of a crust over the original yellow paint. In order to improve the comprehension of the process, mock-up samples of CdS in yellow and orange tonalities were studied by means of structural analysis and optical characterization, with the principal techniques used in the field of cultural heritage. Mock ups were artificially degraded with heat treatment and UV exposure. Relevant colorimetric variation appears in CIE Lab coordinates from reflectance spectra. XRD, SEM-ED...
The degradation of cadmium sulfide (CdS)–based oil paints is a phenomenon potentially threatening th...
The cadmium yellow paints (CdS) used in impressionist and modernist paintings in early 1900s are und...
Recent studies have shown that modern pigments produced after the Second Industrial Revolution are ...
Cadmium yellow degradation afflicts numerous paintings realized between the XIXth and XXth centuries...
Paints based on cadmium sulfide (CdS) were popular among artists beginning in the mid-19th century. ...
Over the past years a number of studies have described the instability of the pigment cadmium yellow...
The chemical and physical alterations of cadmium yellow (CdS) paints in Henri Matisse’s The Joy of L...
Cadmium yellows (CdYs) refer to a family of cadmium sulfide pigments, which have been widely used by...
Paints based on cadmium sulfide (CdS) were popular among artists beginning in the mid-19th century. ...
Cadmium yellows are a class of inorganic pigments introduced during the middle of the 19th c. and wi...
The degradation of cadmium sulfide (CdS)–based oil paints is a phenomenon potentially threatening th...
The cadmium yellow paints (CdS) used in impressionist and modernist paintings in early 1900s are und...
Recent studies have shown that modern pigments produced after the Second Industrial Revolution are ...
Cadmium yellow degradation afflicts numerous paintings realized between the XIXth and XXth centuries...
Paints based on cadmium sulfide (CdS) were popular among artists beginning in the mid-19th century. ...
Over the past years a number of studies have described the instability of the pigment cadmium yellow...
The chemical and physical alterations of cadmium yellow (CdS) paints in Henri Matisse’s The Joy of L...
Cadmium yellows (CdYs) refer to a family of cadmium sulfide pigments, which have been widely used by...
Paints based on cadmium sulfide (CdS) were popular among artists beginning in the mid-19th century. ...
Cadmium yellows are a class of inorganic pigments introduced during the middle of the 19th c. and wi...
The degradation of cadmium sulfide (CdS)–based oil paints is a phenomenon potentially threatening th...
The cadmium yellow paints (CdS) used in impressionist and modernist paintings in early 1900s are und...
Recent studies have shown that modern pigments produced after the Second Industrial Revolution are ...