waxy pigment
Black is actually an ABSENCE of light- or of color. There are no primary pigments or colors that can be blended to produce black. The pigments used in black paint are frequently either carbon black, or black iron oxide.
Both amorphous carbon (lampblack) and graphite are used as black pigments.
This industry classification is comprised of establishments engaged in manufacturing inorganic color pigments, white pigments, and black pigments, including animal black and bone black.
Black comes in two mediums: pigment and light If you mix all the paint pigments you get brown. If you mix colored light beams,you get white,thus the absence of light will give you black. Stated another way: "All the paint is black;but all the light is white"....and black absorbs light while white reflects it. Try shining a flashlight on a black surface and see what you get. Most black pigment is either carbon black or iron oxide.
If you mix all pigments together you will get a murky brown color that borders on black.
Black And White. :)
Black
Yes, carbon black is pure carbon.
Darker pigments like black absorb more light/ energy/ heat than lighter pigments like white
Prehistoric painters used the pigments available in the vicinity. These pigments were the so-called earth pigments, (minerals limonite and hematite, red ochre, yellow ochre and umber), charcoal from the fire (carbon black), burnt bones (bone black) and white from grounded calcite (lime white).
Black
Inorganic metal oxide pigments and organic pigments with high performance are usually applied for atomotive coatings and automotive finish.The major inorganic pigments are bismuth yellow (pigment yellow 184), Nickel-Titanium yellow, Copper chrome black, cobalt blue, cobalt titanium green etc.The organic pigments mainly include azo pigments and phthalocyanine pigments.