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Daniel Smith Extra Fine Dot Card | Watercolor Color Testing Card Colors of Inspiration, 18 Colors

Brand: DANIEL SMITH
The Daniel Smith Colors of Inspiration Dot Card is a curated watercolor testing card featuring 18 expressive and inspiring colors. Designed for exploration and experimentation, it allows artists to experience the behavior of Daniel Smith pigments before committing them to a palette.
Availability: In stock
€9,90
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Daniel Smith Extra Fine Watercolors are renowned worldwide for their exceptional pigment load, brilliance, and lightfastness. Handcrafted in the USA since 1993, they offer unique characteristics such as granulation, depth, and vibrant color response.

The Colors of Inspiration Dot Card is more than a sampler—it is a curated color experience. Each card features real Daniel Smith watercolor dots printed on watercolor paper, ready to be activated with water and a brush. Artists can test washes, mixes, layering, or even create a complete miniature artwork directly on the card.

This selection of 18 colors includes granulating pigments, PrimaTek mineral colors, and bold expressive hues, making it ideal for artists seeking inspiration, exploration, and a deeper understanding of color behavior.

🎨 The card includes dots in the following colors:

  • Lunar Blue
  • Lunar Black
  • Moonglow
  • Iridescent Electric Blue
  • Duochrome Hibiscus
  • Buff Titanium
  • Rose of Ultramarine
  • Green Apatite Genuine
  • Serpentine Genuine
  • Amazonite Genuine
  • Amethyst Genuine
  • Cascade Green
  • Cobalt Teal Blue
  • Quinacridone Coral
  • Opera Pink
  • Quinacridone Burnt Orange
  • Sleeping Beauty Turquoise Genuine
  • Neutral Tint

Inspiration Tip

Use the Colors of Inspiration Dot Card as a color journal—explore granulation, mixes, and textures, and keep it as a visual reference when building future palettes.

How to properly use watercolor Dot Cards

Dot Cards are not just color samples. They are real watercolor paint, dried onto paper, and they function like a compact testing laboratory. Everything you see there—intensity, transparency, granulation, behavior in water—is exactly what you will get from the tube.

Using them correctly starts simply. Lightly wet your brush, gently touch the dot, and let the color activate on its own. Do not rub or press. The paint needs a little time to “wake up,” just as it does on a palette.

Instead of limiting yourself to simple swatches, try different applications: a diluted wash, a more concentrated stroke, wet-on-dry and wet-on-wet. That is where you will see how the pigment moves, whether it granulates, how much it stains the paper, and how it behaves in layers.

Dot Cards are also ideal for mixing. You can test combinations, understand whether two colors harmonize or turn muddy, and explore warm and cool relationships without commitment. Even better, use them for small sketches—a leaf, a cloud, a shadow. At such a small scale, you immediately understand whether a color truly suits you.

The main reason Dot Cards are so useful is that they help you choose consciously. You are not relying on photos or names. You see how the color works on your own paper, with your own brush, and in your own way.

Keep them as a reference archive. Note impressions, mixes, techniques. Over time, you will build a personal color journal that is more valuable than any ready-made chart.

Dot Cards are not demos. They are education in miniature. And when used correctly, they change the way you choose and think about color.