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Best watercolour paper for beginners in the UK: an honest guide

The practical starting point: cotton versus cellulose, the right weight, and where value actually sits.

What watercolour pigment codes actually mean, and why they matter

How to read the label, what the codes tell you, and why names and marketing are not enough.

Arches vs Fabriano Artistico — tested across washes, wet-in-wet and lifting

A direct comparison of two benchmark papers, with clear differences in handling, lifting, and surface character.

At a glance

Paper is the most consequential decision. 300gsm 100% cotton cold press is the right starting point for most painters. It handles water without buckling, takes correction, and responds honestly to the brush. Wood-pulp papers are cheaper and noticeably worse.

Student-grade paint is a reasonable starting point. The honest case for upgrading to professional grade is made in the relevant articles, not assumed here. What matters is pigment load and lightfastness — and both are addressable on a limited budget if you choose carefully.

Pigment codes tell you what you are actually buying. PB29, PY43, PR101 — these identify the colouring agent regardless of brand name or marketing. Single-pigment paints mix more cleanly. Two paints with different names and prices may contain the same pigment.

Brush quality matters less than brush type. A size 6 round Kolinsky sable will outlast a dozen cheap synthetics and hold a point under pressure. Good synthetic brushes — Silver Black Velvet is the most cited — have closed the gap considerably for beginners and painters who prefer not to use animal hair.

  • Earth pigments in watercolour: PY43, PR101 and why the codes matter

    Two tubes labelled Yellow Ochre can behave very differently in a wash. The pigment code tells you which one you have.

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  • Where to buy watercolour paper in the US: a guide by format and budget

    The right supplier depends on whether you want individual sheets, blocks, or pads, and how far you are willing to travel or wait for delivery.

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  • Where to buy watercolour paper in the UK: a guide by format and budget

    The right supplier depends on whether you want individual sheets, blocks, or pads, and how much you want to spend on postage.

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  • Best hot press watercolour paper for botanical work

    Materials Paper Guide Hot press paper rewards precision and punishes impatience. For botanical work, fine detail, and pen and wash, it is the right surface. Choosing the right one matters. 6 min read At a glance Fluid 100 Hot Press holds detail through the most layers. Hard, even sizing keeps edges crisp on the third…

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  • Watercolour brush shapes: what each one actually does

    Materials Brushes Guide Watercolour brush sets tend to contain more shapes than most painters end up using. Understanding what each one does prevents buying brushes that will sit unused. 8 min read At a glance A round is the default brush for almost everything. A size 8 or 10 round with a good point covers…

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  • A core watercolour palette: the paints that never leave

    Materials Palettes Guide A palette of six to ten well-chosen single-pigment colours covers most mixing needs. The difficulty is knowing which six to ten. 8 min read Building a core watercolour palette is one of the first real decisions a painter faces, and the advice available rarely helps. Twelve colours are recommended, then twenty, then…

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  • Lightfastness in watercolour: which pigments last

    Materials Pigments Guide Lightfastness in watercolour is not a technical nicety. It is the difference between a painting that holds its colour for a generation and one that looks washed out within a few years of being hung near a window. The question of which paints will last is simpler to answer than most advice…

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  • Single pigment watercolours: what they are and why they mix better

    Materials Pigments Guide Single-pigment watercolours contain exactly one colourant, identified by a Colour Index code printed on the label. When paints mix badly and produce colours that are dull or muddy, the problem is usually too many pigments meeting on the paper at once. Knowing which paints are single-pigment, and why that matters, resolves most…

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  • Granulating pigments in watercolour: what causes it and how to use it

    Materials Pigments Guide Granulation is not a flaw and it is not random. It is a physical property of certain pigments that can be predicted, controlled, and used to considerable effect. 8 min read At a glance Granulation is a property of the pigment, not the paper. Certain pigments have particles heavy or large enough…

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  • Watercolour half pans vs tubes: which format suits how you work

    Materials Paint Comparison The choice between half pans and tubes is not about seriousness or style. It is about how you mix, where you paint, and how much you use. 8 min read At a glance Pans suit outdoor and location painters. Compact, portable, no mixing time. The right choice if you paint away from…

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Recommended materials

These are the four products a painter starting with watercolour in the UK should own before anything else. Each is chosen on tested performance, not availability or price point alone.

Paper
Saunders Waterford 300gsm cold press — the most reliable 100% cotton paper available from UK suppliers at a sensible price point View at Jackson's
Winsor and Newton Professional watercolours — consistent pigment load, good lightfastness ratings across the range, widely stocked View paints
Brush
Da Vinci Casaneo size 6 round — holds a point and carries enough water for confident washes; the best synthetic brush at this price View at Jackson's
Palette
Porcelain mixing palette with wells — does not stain, gives honest colour readings, easier to keep clean than plastic View at Jackson's

What matters, and what does not

Paper weight is given in both gsm and lb because UK suppliers use both. 300gsm and 140lb refer to the same weight measured in different systems. 300gsm is the practical minimum for working wet with any confidence. Below that, paper buckles and the medium stops behaving predictably.

Lightfastness ratings follow the ASTM scale used by manufacturers. ASTM I and II are considered lightfast for artists’ use. Anything rated III or lower will fade — this applies across all brands, including expensive ones. The rating appears on the tube or pan label. Check it before buying, not after.

Pigment codes identify the actual colouring agent in a paint regardless of what the manufacturer has named it. PB29 is French ultramarine across every brand that uses it. PY43 is yellow ochre. Knowing the code tells you how a colour will mix, whether it will granulate, and whether it will last. The Handprint pigment database (opens in new tab) is the most complete independent reference for this.

On brushes: Kolinsky sable holds more water, returns to its point more reliably, and has a spring that most synthetics still do not match. For painters working in detail or loading a brush for wet washes, it is worth the cost. The Da Vinci Casaneo (opens in new tab) and Silver Black Velvet ranges are the most commonly recommended synthetics and perform well at this level.

What watercolour paper should a beginner buy in the UK?

Start with a 300gsm cold press paper made from 100% cotton. Saunders Waterford and Bockingford are both available from UK suppliers and represent good value at this stage. Avoid wood-pulp papers — they are cheaper but buckle badly and do not hold washes well.

What is the difference between 140lb and 300gsm watercolour paper?

They are the same weight measured in different systems. 140lb (imperial) and 300gsm (metric) both refer to paper heavy enough to hold moderate amounts of water without significant buckling. For wet, heavily saturated work, stretch the paper or move to a heavier block regardless of which measurement your supplier uses.

Is professional watercolour paint worth the extra cost?

For most painters, yes — once you have the basic technique. Professional-grade paints contain higher concentrations of pigment, fewer fillers, and more consistent lightfastness. The difference is visible in washes and mixes. Student-grade paint is a reasonable starting point but it does limit what you can see your work doing.

What do pigment codes mean on watercolour paints?

Pigment codes identify the actual colouring agent in a paint — PB29 is ultramarine blue, PY43 is raw sienna, and so on. Knowing the code tells you what you are actually buying, regardless of the brand name on the tube. It also tells you how a colour will behave: its transparency, granulation tendency, and lightfastness. Single-pigment paints mix more cleanly than convenience mixtures.

What is the difference between Kolinsky sable and synthetic watercolour brushes?

Kolinsky sable holds more water, returns to its point more reliably, and has a spring that most synthetics do not match. For painters who work in detail or rely on a loaded brush for wet washes, it is worth the cost. Good synthetic brushes — Silver Black Velvet is the most cited — have closed the gap considerably and are a sound choice for beginners or painters who prefer not to use animal hair.

What watercolour palette is best for studio use?

A porcelain palette with separate wells for individual colours and a generous mixing area. Porcelain keeps colours clean, is easy to wipe, and does not stain the way plastic does over time. For travel, a sealed metal pan palette with a lid that doubles as a mixing surface is the practical choice.

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