Do you mean wet or dry fresco?
In both cases, you need alkali-resistent pigments. In wet fresco (the original fresco technique) they're mixed with the plaster used to finish the wall, in dry fresco (fresco secco) a paint is made with mainly caseine. I've seen an old recipe that involves fresh cheese (which contains caseine)
painting onto wet plaster
The Basic materials to make a volcano are. Mentos,baking soda,vinegar, modeling clay and diet pepsi
I believe it is called MEDUIM or MEDIA FOR PLURAL
to make it easy
The basic materials are wood, brass strings and gut strings.
The artist mostly use geometry like all basic shapes to make darwing and paintings easy.
Atom
The artist has used Bronze and Patina to make this artwork.
It is no more "important" than you recycling your waste. It is a choice.
Frescoes were made by painting waterbased paint on fresh plaster. This caused the paint to sink into the plaster, thus making it much more permanent than painting on a dried surface. Leonardo da Vinci's famous Last Supper is a fresco and even though it is damaged, it still has lasted over 400 years.
You actually BUY basic molds from Nack (materials merchant). He's the first NPC on the left when you step inside the portal to Ardentmill.
There are two materials. They are CO2 and water