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Are Phoenix Professional watercolors secretly the same as Winsor & Newton Professional paints? Today on Watercolor Scientist, we investigate a rumor that’s been circulating for a long time — and I finally bought the Phoenix Professional 36-tube set to test it myself. Using the scientific method, I compare 27 pairs of matching colors from Phoenix and Winsor & Newton Professional. 🔬 What we tested: • Pigment load • Hue accuracy • Granulation • Flow behavior • Single-pigment comparisons • Multi-pigment recipe comparisons • Pigment database search results (including how rare exact pigment-order matches are!) ⚠️ Important Caveat: These swatches were made at different times, on different paper, and with slightly different technique. That can absolutely affect dispersion and final appearance — so please interpret with that in mind. 🎨 Key Findings: • Winsor & Newton single-pigment paints had higher pigment load. • Most hues were remarkably similar across both brands. • Phoenix Cadmium-Free Red is cooler than W&N’s version. • Single-pigment paints used the exact same pigments in most cases (not unusual). • But multi-pigment mixes (New Gamboge, Sap Green, Naples Yellow, Burnt Umber, Vandyke Brown, Indigo, Payne’s Grey, Lamp Black)… ✅ used the exact same pigments in the exact same order across both brands ✅ which is extremely rare — usually under 5% across global watercolor brands. 📌 Conclusion: Phoenix Professional paints are very likely made from the same recipes as Winsor & Newton, but with lower pigment concentration. Despite that, they paint out beautifully — and for the price, I’m totally okay with a little less saturation. ✨ If you enjoy investigations like this, don’t forget to subscribe! Thank you for joining me at Watercolor Scientist, where we ask weird questions, test our hypotheses, and share our results with the world. #watercolorscientist #phoenixprofessional #winsorandnewton