The Zorn Palette

Anders Zorn (1860-1920), the Swedish Impressionist, is renowned for his use of a limited palette of colours. His so-called ‘Zorn palette’ is now widely used to help students learn about colour theory and mixing.

If you’d like to learn more about Anders Zorn and discover how to create some of his paintings, then check out my 31-page ebook here: Anders Zorn: Palette & Painting Method Ebook

Anders Zorn Ebook

Pigments

What Colours You Need

This is a limited palette that uses just FOUR oil pigments as follows:

Titanium White

Originally Lead White

Ivory Black

Or Lamp Black

Yellow Ochre

Vermilion

Often replaced with Cadmium Red (Light)

Step 1

Setting Up the Palette

Set up your palette, so that values 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 using Titanium White and Ivory Black form a column on the left-hand side.

And the two actual colours that will be used are placed horizontally on top, in order from left to right: Yellow Ochre and Vermillion. Allow enough space between these to mix an analogous colour between them.

Step 2

Mixing Colour Value Strings

Just as there is a string of values between white and black, now start mixing a string of values for each colour: Yellow Ochre and Vermillion.

Step 3

Mixing Between Yellow and Red

In the third column from the left, I’ve mixed up a new colour by mixing Yellow Ochre with Vermillion, creating a new colour that falls halfway between the two. Another string of values is created from this.

Summary

Allow time and freedom to experiment with colours, to find the right ones to use in your painting.

This is a simple, small-scale colour chart. You can widen the range of possibilities into an even larger chart, including three-way colour mixes. The resulting palette provides a guesstimate of what colours you might need in your painting and how they can be achieved.

If you’d like to learn more about Anders Zorn and discover how to create some of his paintings, then check out my 31-page ebook here: Anders Zorn: Palette & Painting Method Ebook

Anders Zorn Ebook