A medieval book historian by the name of Erik Kwakkel came across an extremely old handwritten book, full of color swatches. An author and artist known only as A. Boogert filled 800 pages with watercolors, creating almost every color imaginable. It was meant as an educational guide, but very few have seen it until now.
The guide was carefully handwritten and lasted hundreds of pages.
The artist mixed hundreds upon hundreds of color samples.
It was called the “Traité des couleurs servant à la peinture à l’eau.”
Back in 1692, the artist began by explaining the process of mixing colors.
He described how to create certain hues and change the tone by adding one, two, or three parts of water.
That simple explanation turned into hundreds of pages of swatches.
Source: Erik Kwakkel via Colossal
If you’d like to see high resolution images of the medieval book, click here. How the artist was able to create the scope and detail of this book, especially given the time period, is nearly unfathomable. If you’d like to see this historic book in person, it’s kept at the Bibliothèque Méjanes in Aix-en-Provence, France.
Can you imagine how many weeks, months or years it took the almost-anonymous author to create this guide? Incredible.
Reposted from Viralnova
Source: Erik Kwakkel via Colossal
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