| 1. | It was replaced in the 19th century by zinc white and titanium white.
|
| 2. | Zinc white, zinc oxide, is of a purer white color than white lead.
|
| 3. | The main usage of zinc oxide ( zinc white ) was in paints and as an additive to ointments.
|
| 4. | In 1870, a zinc white factory brought industrial activity to the municipality, along with jobs and air pollution.
|
| 5. | Zinc white was accepted as a pigment in oil paintings by 1834 but it did not mix well with oil.
|
| 6. | It was widely used by artists until the 19th century, when it was replaced by zinc white and titanium white.
|
| 7. | Titanium and zinc whites are far less toxic than lead white and have largely supplanted it in most fine arts applications.
|
| 8. | It was started in 1934 at Bryn, Oslo to produce the painting color zinc white, constituted by zinc oxide.
|
| 9. | For example, during the late 1890s and early 1900s, some artists used zinc white as a ground for their oil paintings.
|
| 10. | The mural, painted by artist, Xavier Gonzales, is Belgian linen on canvas using zinc white, earth and cadmium colors.
|