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I started building my Winsor & Newton professional watercolour collection many years ago, but my painting journey has had its fair share of stops and starts so the paints didn’t get much use until recently. The W&N professional watercolour range includes over 100 paints, many of which are single-pigment paints. Although W&N is an English brand with a history spanning nearly 200 years, their watercolours are now produced in France. Most of my collection consists of tube paints that I’ve squeezed into pans, and I haven’t had any issues using them this way. The internet tells me that W&N uses a different formula for their tube and pan paints, but I couldn’t find any official confirmation of this on their website (unless I missed it). Personally, I prefer to pre-wet all my watercolour paints shortly before use, perhaps the English climate is also helping to keep them from drying out too much. In the video, I mention MBIT (2-Methyl-1,2-benzisothiazolin-3-one) and IPBC (iodopropynyl butylcarbamate)—both are preservatives commonly used in a wide range of products, including paints. I don’t know if all W&N watercolours contain these, so I recommend checking their website. Each paint has an accompanying safety data sheet available through the individual paint pages in their professional watercolour section. Please do your own research if you’d like to know more. One area of frustration for me is W&N’s approach to pigment information transparency. For example, transparent orange is made from a DPP pigment (which I believe is PO73), and aqua green— phthalo. Even if the exact pigments are unknown, I feel W&N could offer more transparency around what’s in their paints. Also, keep in mind that some colours, like new gamboge and permanent alizarin crimson, now different formulas. So it’s always worth checking the pigment information of your paints if it matters to you. Winsor & Newton makes high-quality paints, but in my opinion, the brand can feel a bit distant—especially if you're not a professional artist. That’s just my personal impression, though, and others may feel differently. I hope you enjoy the video :) Here are some useful links: W&N website https://uk.winsornewton.com/collectio... W&N Revival collection (this was released around mid 2024 and only now I'm seeing them advertising the new range) https://uk.winsornewton.com/collectio... W&N now a BCorp https://uk.winsornewton.com/blogs/art...