Messy Color™ Indigo Ltd Run

511804 - Sold Out

Indigo Ltd Run (511804)<br />An extremely dark transparent blue.

An extremely dark transparent blue.




"Here is another very dark, intense colour that just begs to be used in white-cored cane, twisties, and other ways that need very intensely coloured glasses." Read more at DragonJools blog. – Dwyn Tomlinson

Click here for other interesting Indigo Ltd Run discoveries.

 
Messy Indigo on Marshmallow
Gloria Sevey
Vetrofond Lemongrass layered with dots of Effetre Dark Ivory and a mixture of Indigo, DH 462 Purple Luster, & DH test glass OK-381R
Darlene Collette
with Messy Indigo
Melanie Graham
Messy Indigo
Sue Stewart
Messy Indigo
Genea Crivello
Messy Clear with Indigo and Crimson swirls
Chris Haussler

CiM Tester Feedback

  • Indigo looks nearly black in rod form but is an extremely dark transparent blue.
"Indigo is a more deeply saturated blue than Effetre cobalt." – Genea Crivello

Join Trudi Doherty's FB group Lampwork Colour Resource Sharing Information for a catalogue of color study.
Claudia Eidenbenz’s "Vetrothek" (glass library) is a great resource for color comparisons.
See Kay Powell’s frit testing samples.
Browse Serena Thomas’ color gallery.
Check out Miriam Steger’s CiM color charts.
Consult Jolene Wolfe's glass testing resource page.


“The gorgeous rich blue shade in these beads is Indigo, I have used it to make striped core and a petal beads and tiny stacked dot beads. It remains vibrant even when heavily diluted using these layering techniques and the edges of the dots are crisp and clean over white.” Read more at Kitzbitz Art Glass’ blog.
Jolene Wolfe
"Indigo is a super dense blue that would lend itself well to twistie making and teeny tiny layered dots over pale opaques." Read more at Kitbitz Art Glass’s blog.
Jolene Wolfe
Indigo with Tibet.
Sue Stewart
"Silver glass likes Indigo very much. The reducing silver glass frit shined up and got a beautiful brightness to it, and the TerraNova2 frit got some nice colour as well." Read more at Melanie's blog.
Melanie Graham
"Here is another very dark, intense colour that just begs to be used in white-cored cane, twisties, and other ways that need very intensely coloured glasses." Read more at DragonJools blog.
Dwyn Tomlinson