Every speck of pigment in these tubes has been painstakingly reclaimed from waters tainted by iron released from mines. Iron oxides make lightfast, natural, and safe oil paints. Gamblin wants to put them where they belong: on your palette.
As a colourhouse that promises to be kind to artists and the environment, turning this pigment into paint was something Gamblin felt both compelled and honoured to do.
In 2018 Gamblin officially joined forces with John Sabraw and team by making one full batch of paint with the reclaimed pigment. The process to collect the pigment worked, and an oil paint manufacturer was on board. The concept was no longer just an idea, it was a reality.
Gamblin is committed to reducing the use of plastic and unnecessary packaging wherever they can. Gamblin designed this set without plastic shrink-wrap. The sleeve and insert are recyclable, and the structure of the packaging has a function; it’s a primed panel made in Oregon by our friends at American Easel. It’s the ideal painting surface made with U.S.-grown poplar sides and a Baltic birch face.