
Making Emerald Green (Paris Green) — The Brilliant and Deadly Copper Arsenate Pigment
Emerald green (copper acetoarsenite, Cu(C₂H₃O₂)₂·3Cu(AsO₂)₂), also known as Paris green, Schweinfurt green, or Vienna green, is one of the most vivid green pigments ever created — and one of the most toxic substances in the history of art. Developed in 1814 by Wilhelm Sattler in Schweinfurt, Germany, it produced a dazzling, intense, blue-green colour that no other pigment could match. Its brilliance made it wildly popular for everything from artist's paint to wallpaper, fabric dye, and even confectionery colouring.
The pigment is made by reacting verdigris (copper acetate) with arsenic trioxide (white arsenic) in acetic acid. The resulting compound has a vivid, almost luminous green colour with remarkable opacity and tinting strength. Cézanne, Monet, and Renoir all used it — the Impressionists particularly valued its intensity for painting sunlit foliage.
EXTREME SAFETY WARNING: Emerald green contains ARSENIC — it is acutely toxic if ingested, inhaled, or absorbed through skin. It caused widespread poisoning in the 19th century: arsenic-laced wallpaper in damp rooms released toxic arsenious gas (Gosio gas) that killed occupants. Napoleon may have been slowly poisoned by arsenic green wallpaper on St. Helena. This blueprint is for HISTORICAL EDUCATION ONLY. Full PPE, fume hood, and hazardous waste disposal are MANDATORY. Modern alternatives (phthalo green, viridian) are far safer.
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