A lake pigment is a pigment made by precipitating a dye with an chemically inert binder, or mordant, usually a metallic salt. Lake pigments are largely organic compound.[K. Hunger. W. Herbst "Pigments, Organic" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2012. ] Manufacturers and suppliers to artists and industry frequently omit the lake designation in the name. Many lake pigments are Fugitive pigment because the dyes involved are not lightfast. Red lakes were particularly important in Renaissance art and Baroque art paintings; they were often used as translucent glazes to portray the colors of rich fabrics and draperies.[David Bomford and Ashok Roy, A Closer Look - Colour, National Gallery Company, p. 41.]
Etymology
The term
lake is derived from the term
lac, the secretions of the Indian wood insect
Kerria lacca (formerly
Laccifer lacca or
Coccus lacca).
["lake, n.6". OED Online. December 2011. Oxford University Press. 25 January 2012.] It has the same root as the word
lacquer, and comes originally from the Hindi word lakh, through the Arabic word lakk and the Persian word lak.
[ Webster's New World Dictionary of American English, Third College Edition, 1988.]
Chemistry
Many lake pigments are
. They characteristically have
sulfonate and sometimes
carboxylate substituents, which confer negative charge to the
chromophore (colored species).
The metallic salts or binders used are typically colourless or almost so. The organic component of the dye determines the color of the resulting precipitate. The metallic salts that induce the formation of lakes are typically salts of dications such as calcium or strontium.[ The resulting lake pigment can be diluted with an inert material such as alumina.
]
History and art
Lake pigments have a long history in decoration and the arts. Some have been produced for thousands of years and traded over long distances. In ancient times chalk, white clay, and crushed were used as sources of the calcium salts.
The red lakes were particularly important in the history of art; because they were translucent, they were often used in layers of glazes over a more opaque red (sometimes the mineral-based pigment vermilion, or sometimes a red lake mixed with lead white or vermilion) to create a deep, rich red color. They are common in paintings by Venetian artists of the 16th century, including Titian, to depict fine draperies and fabrics.
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Indigo dye was originally produced from the leaves of woad, and was known in ancient Egypt. In the late Middle Ages, a fashion for woad as a textile dye led to overplanting and soil exhaustion in many parts of Europe. After trade routes opened to the east, indigo was imported from India as a substitute for woad, and the cultivation of woad became uneconomical in Europe. Today, the dark blue dye known as indigo once produced from woad and Indigofera tinctoria is largely of synthetic origin.
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Rose madder, originally from the root of the madder plant, is also known as alizarin crimson in its synthetic form. Since rose madder is fugitive pigment when exposed to light, its use has been largely superseded, even in synthetic form, by quinacridone pigments.
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Carmine, also called crimson lake, was originally produced from the cochineal insect, native to Central America and South America. When Spanish colonizers encountered the Aztec Empire, they encountered Aztec warriors garbed in an unknown crimson color. Cochineal became the second most valuable export from the Spanish colonies in the Americas after silver, and the Spanish zealously guarded the secret of its production for centuries.
Carminic acid, the organic compound which gives carmine its color, was synthesized in 1991. Researchers in 2022 were examining the potential to genetically engineer microbes to produce carminic acid.
Indigo and rose madder are now produced more cheaply from synthetic sources, although some use of natural products persists, especially among . The food industry and cosmetics have shown renewed interest in cochineal as a source of natural red dye.