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Making Malachite Green Pigment — Grinding the Copper Mineral into Painter's Green
Charlie

Créé par

Charlie

22. mai 2026DE
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Making Malachite Green Pigment — Grinding the Copper Mineral into Painter's Green

Malachite (Cu₂CO₃(OH)₂, basic copper carbonate hydroxide) is one of humanity's oldest green pigments, found in Egyptian tomb paintings dating to the 4th millennium BCE. Unlike verdigris — which is manufactured by corroding copper with acid — malachite pigment is simply ground from the natural mineral. The vivid green of malachite comes from its copper content, and the mineral's distinctive banded structure (alternating light and dark green zones) has made it prized as both a gemstone and a pigment source for over 5,000 years.

The key to a good malachite pigment lies entirely in particle size control. Malachite changes colour dramatically depending on how finely it is ground: coarse particles produce a deep, rich green; medium particles give the ideal bright green; and very fine particles become pale, washed-out greenish-white. This is because the individual mineral crystals are green, but as particles get smaller, more light scatters off surfaces rather than passing through the crystal — diluting the colour. The ideal malachite pigment is therefore ground to a medium-fine consistency, not the ultra-fine powder used for most other pigments.

Levigation (washing the ground pigment in water and separating by settling time) is the traditional method for sorting particles by size. Heavier (coarser) particles settle first; lighter (finer) particles remain suspended longer. By decanting at timed intervals, the pigment maker can collect fractions of different particle sizes and select the one with the best colour. Malachite pigment is compatible with all traditional binders — egg tempera, oil, gum arabic, lime (fresco), and beeswax (encaustic) — and is one of the few green pigments stable enough for fresco painting.

Débutant
60-90 minutes active, overnight settling

Instructions

1

Select and inspect the malachite mineral

Examine the raw malachite ore and select pieces with the most vivid, saturated green colour. Discard any pieces with brown iron staining, white calcite inclusions, or dull grey-green areas — these impurities will muddy the final pigment. Pure malachite is a rich green with the characteristic banded or botryoidal (grape-like) structure. Rinse the selected pieces in clean water and scrub with a brush to remove surface dirt and loose rock. Let dry completely before proceeding.

Matériaux pour cette étape :

Malachite Ore (crushed)Malachite Ore (crushed)200 g

Outils nécessaires :

Scrub BrushScrub Brush
2

Crush to coarse fragments

Place the cleaned malachite pieces in a heavy stone mortar and crush to coarse fragments (2-5 mm) with firm, straight-down blows — do not grind in circles yet. The goal is to break the mineral into small pieces without over-grinding. Malachite is relatively soft (Mohs hardness 3.5-4) and crushes easily. Work in small batches to maintain control over particle size. Remove any non-green fragments or impurities that become visible as the pieces break apart.

Outils nécessaires :

Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)
3

Grind to medium-fine particles on a glass slab

Transfer the coarse fragments to a flat glass slab and grind with a glass muller using small circular motions. Add a few drops of water to help the grinding (wet grinding reduces dust and improves particle breakdown). Grind to a medium-fine consistency — the particles should feel slightly gritty between your fingers, not silky-smooth. DO NOT over-grind: malachite that is ground too fine loses its vivid green and becomes a pale, washed-out greenish-white. Check the colour frequently by smearing a small sample thinly on white paper.

Outils nécessaires :

Glass MullerGlass Muller
4

Levigation — wash to sort particles by size

Place the ground malachite in a tall glass jar and add clean water — approximately 10 parts water to 1 part pigment. Stir vigorously and let stand. The heaviest (coarsest) particles settle within 30 seconds — these are too coarse and dark. After 30 seconds, carefully pour the still-cloudy water into a second jar, leaving the coarse sediment behind. Let the second jar settle for 5-10 minutes — the medium particles that settle during this time are the ideal pigment fraction with the brightest green. Pour off the remaining cloudy water into a third jar (this ultra-fine fraction will be pale). Repeat the process 2-3 times to wash out any soluble impurities.

Outils nécessaires :

Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids
5

Dry and store the finished pigment

Let each levigation fraction settle completely (overnight is ideal). Carefully pour off the clear water without disturbing the sediment. Spread the wet pigment paste in a thin layer on a clean, non-absorbent surface (glass or glazed ceramic) and let dry completely at room temperature — 1-2 days. Once dry, the pigment forms a hard cake that breaks apart easily. Gently crumble into a powder and store in a sealed glass jar away from direct sunlight. Label each fraction by settling time. The medium fraction is the primary painting pigment; the coarse fraction can be re-ground; the fine fraction is useful for tinting and glazing.

Matériaux

1

Outils requis

4

Matériaux des Blueprints connectés

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