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Making Raw and Burnt Sienna — The Warm Iron Earth from Tuscany
Charlie

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Charlie

22. maggio 2026DE
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Making Raw and Burnt Sienna — The Warm Iron Earth from Tuscany

Sienna is a natural earth pigment named after the Tuscan city of Siena, where some of the finest deposits were historically mined. It is composed primarily of iron oxide (goethite) with clay and a small amount of manganese dioxide — typically 1-5% manganese, compared to 5-20% in umber. This lower manganese content gives sienna a warmer, more orange-brown tone than umber's cool greenish-brown. Raw sienna is a warm, transparent golden-brown — one of the most beautiful earth colours, valued for its luminous warmth in glazing.

Burnt sienna — produced by calcining raw sienna at moderate heat — is a deep, warm, orange-red brown, one of the most useful and popular colours in the entire painter's palette. The calcination converts the goethite (FeOOH) to hematite (Fe₂O₃), shifting the colour from golden-brown to a rich reddish-brown with a distinctly orange undertone. Both raw and burnt sienna have been in continuous use since antiquity. They are completely lightfast, non-toxic, and compatible with every painting binder. Burnt sienna mixed with ultramarine blue produces a range of subtle, luminous greys that are far more beautiful than any grey mixed from black and white.

Principiante
3-4 hours active, 1-2 days drying

Istruzioni

1

Select and inspect raw sienna earth

Obtain raw sienna earth from a geological supplier or art pigment dealer. True sienna is a warm golden-brown, distinctly more orange-toned than yellow ochre and warmer than raw umber. The streak on white paper should be a clear warm brown with a golden or orange undertone — not greenish (which would indicate high manganese, closer to umber) or pale yellow (which is ochre, not sienna). Italian sienna from Tuscany is the traditional benchmark, though good deposits are found worldwide. Remove stones and organic debris.

Materiali per questo passaggio:

Raw Sienna EarthRaw Sienna Earth500 g
2

Crush and grind to coarse powder

Break the raw sienna lumps in a stone mortar and pestle, pounding and grinding until the earth is a coarse, gritty powder. Sienna is typically soft and crumbly — easier to crush than most ochres — because it forms in decomposed rock and soil rather than in hard mineral veins. Wear a dust mask during crushing. The coarse powder is now ready for levigation.

Strumenti necessari:

Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)Stone Mortar and Pestle (large)
Dust MaskDust Mask
3

Levigate the raw sienna

Add the crushed sienna to a glass settling jar with water at roughly 5:1 ratio. Stir vigorously, wait 30 seconds for coarse sand and grit to settle, then carefully pour the still-cloudy suspension through muslin cloth into a second clean jar. Let the second jar settle undisturbed for 4-6 hours. The fine pigment collects as a dense, smooth layer at the bottom. Pour off the clear water and repeat the settling if any grit remains. The levigated sienna should feel perfectly smooth — no grittiness at all.

Strumenti necessari:

Glass Settling Jar (5L)Glass Settling Jar (5L)
Muslin ClothMuslin Cloth
Stirring Rod (wooden)Stirring Rod (wooden)
4

Dry and divide — reserve half as raw sienna

Spread the wet pigment paste on a clean glass surface and dry completely (1-2 days). Grind half on a glass muller to a fine, smooth powder — this is finished raw sienna, a beautiful warm golden-brown with a luminous transparency that makes it one of the finest glazing pigments in oil painting. Store in a sealed glass jar. Reserve the other half for calcination.

Strumenti necessari:

Glass MullerGlass Muller
Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids
5

Calcine to produce burnt sienna

Place the reserved raw sienna in a clay crucible and heat gradually to 300-500°C, holding for 30-60 minutes. As the goethite dehydrates to hematite, the colour transforms from golden-brown to a rich, warm orange-red brown — one of the most dramatic and beautiful colour changes in pigment chemistry. The exact temperature determines the final shade: lower temperatures produce a more moderate warming, while higher temperatures yield a deeper, more reddish tone. Do not exceed 600°C or the pigment dulls. Let cool completely.

Strumenti necessari:

Clay Crucible (refractory)Clay Crucible (refractory)
Crucible Tongs (long-handled)Crucible Tongs (long-handled)
Leather Gauntlet GlovesLeather Gauntlet Gloves
6

Grind the burnt sienna to finished pigment

Grind the cooled, calcined sienna on a glass muller to a fine, smooth powder. Burnt sienna is a warm, rich orange-red brown — compare it to the raw sienna from step 4 to see the transformation clearly. Store in a sealed glass jar. Both raw and burnt sienna are permanent, lightfast, non-toxic, and compatible with all media. Burnt sienna is particularly valued in watercolour for its granulating texture and in oil for its warm, transparent glazing quality. Mixed with ultramarine blue, it produces some of the most beautiful neutral greys and shadow tones available to the painter.

Strumenti necessari:

Glass MullerGlass Muller
Clean Glass Jars with LidsClean Glass Jars with Lids

Materiali

1

Strumenti richiesti

10

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