 my hands are very messy now and I want to show you something else that I got. So that one. So once you do that then it has to set aside and just dry. So that the tube paints just dry out. So generally what I do is I take it and I set it up on the shelf next to the camera and I just leave it there. It takes two or three days and they'll dry out completely and that's perfect. I have a drawer just for my Daniel Smith tubes. So these can all go down in the drawer now. So I have this other set. These are hard to get little known Italian watercolors. They were painted in the neck to get. They're not super cheap. They're artist quality. I think they're hand mixed and handmade. I will put the link in the description below. Once I heard about them and I was chatting with a guy online and they're honey-based. I really wanted to get some and try but it was a matter of saving up funds and then it takes a while to get them here. Although they got here a lot faster than I thought they were going to and I haven't tried them yet. They just came in. I don't know how to say that. Yes I'm Italian by heritage but I never learned Italian so I don't know but that's the name of the company. This looks very similar of course to the Prima palette. It's your standard metallic pocket palette and I haven't opened them or anything yet. So we're going to do that now. First we're going to take our card and make our color key. This only has 12 pans in it so and thankfully the color names are in English on the wrappers. I was worried about that after I ordered it. I was worried I'd have to go get one of my aunts to translate. Now these are, you can tell, see you should really measure them if you want your squares to all be the same because those are clearly not all the same but that's okay. So the first thing I'm going to do is write the names. It's funny that the ultra marine blue has a purple label. What's this one right here? So I'm interested to see what the color looks like. I do wish they had put one less brown in here and a purple. It has black which is okay. I prefer paint gray but yeah there's three like brown tones. Okay I know nothing about these paints so let's unwrap them and find out. So I'm going to tighten this up a little bit because it's a little loose by pushing little fingers in. I'm going to try and save the little labels because that's what I like to do. Yeah pop them back in. It's nice that the pans are full but they're not full all the way to the top. Some of those metallic colors I just poured were a little too full and I can tell these are made with honey like that one I just stuck my finger in was a little bit sticky. That part I'm not going to like I can tell you already but I think I might like the way they work on paper so I might have to just deal with it. You want to make sure when you're working with paints that are artist quality and have pigments in them like cadmium that you wash your hands that you use some kind of art guard or something on your hands before you get started that you don't have any cuts because different pigments like cadmium are toxic so they make beautiful colors but they're toxic so I like that they're wrapped I like that they're wrapped well hate unwrapping them and that's not just true of these that's true of all artists great paints they're just kind of a pain even the primas just especially when you have like no fingernails so there's one row let's get these out. I will try to remember to include links to both the Daniel Smith website and this website Zecchi is how I want to say it but I don't think that's the name right way and I'm sure my grandmother were alive she'd correct me and I should be horrified at my lack of ability to say anything in the Italian language properly. I may split this up and up into two videos so if you're seeing this one and going what Daniel Smith paints that would be because when I'm filming it I'm doing it all as one but if I've decided to split it up and you don't see we go right into this palette and you haven't seen the Daniel Smith one I'll put the link for that video in the description below and the links for the Daniel Smith website will be in that video okay now this one these are dried cakes although like I said they're I think the binder is honey so they're a tad sticky and they look shiny I should say but they're dry so we're going to have to rewet them so we can make our color key you like water get the water without the metallic stuff floating in it yeah there we go need a rag all righty look how bright that is that's pretty so I put the majority of pigment at the top and then I just pull it down with water so we can get like a gradient and I have an idea of you know what it looks like