Dictionary Definition
verdigris
Noun
1 a blue or green powder used as a paint pigment
[syn: cupric
acetate]
2 a green patina that forms on copper or brass or
bronze that has been exposed to the air or water for long periods
of time v : color verdigris
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Quotations
- 1922, Virginia
Woolf, Jacob's
Room, Vintage Classics, paperback edition, page 13
- Let's to the museum. Cannon-balls, arrow-heads; Roman glass and a forceps green with verdigris.
Extensive Definition
Verdigris is the common name for the green coating or patina formed when copper, brass or bronze is weathered and exposed
to air or seawater over a period of time. It is usually a basic
copper
carbonate, but near the sea will be a basic copper
chloride. If ethanoic
acid is present at the time of weathering, it may consist of
copper(II)
acetate. Its name comes from the Middle
English vertegrez, from the Old French
verte grez, an alteration of vert-de-Grèce ("green of Greece"). The modern
French spelling of this word is vert-de-gris.
The vivid green color of copper(II) acetate makes
this form of verdigris a very common pigment. Until the 19th
century, verdigris was the most vibrant green pigment available and frequently
used in painting. Verdigris is lightfast in oil paint, as numerous
examples of 15th century paintings show. However, its lightfastness
and air resistance is very low in other media. Copper resinate,
made from verdigris, isn't lightfast, even in oil paint. In the
presence of light and air, green copper resinate becomes stable
brown copper oxide. This degradation is to blame for the brown or
bronze color of grass or foliage in many old paintings, although
not typically those of the "Flemish primitive" painters such as
Jan
van Eyck, who often used normal verdigris. In addition,
verdigris is a fickle pigment requiring special preparation of
paint, careful layered application and immediate sealing with
varnish to avoid rapid discoloration (but not in the case of oil
paint). Verdigris has the curious property in oil painting that it
is initially bluish-green, but turns a rich foliage green over the
course of about a month. This green is stable. Verdigris fell out
of use by artists as more stable green pigments became
available.
Verdigris has also been used in medicine and as a
fungicide.
Copper(II) acetate is soluble in alcohol and
water and slightly soluble in ether and glycerol. It melts at 115
°C and decomposes at 240 °C. It can be prepared by reacting
copper(II)
oxide, CuO, or copper(II)
carbonate, CuCO3, with
acetic
acid, CH3COOH . It is used
industrially as a fungicide, a catalyst for organic reactions, and
in dyeing (The Merck Index , Ninth Ed., 1976).
References
verdigris in Contenese: 銅綠
verdigris in Spanish: Verdigris
verdigris in German: Grünspan
verdigris in French:
Vert-de-gris