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lead white

American  
[led] / lɛd /

noun

  1. a poisonous pigment used in painting, consisting of white lead and characterized chiefly by a fugitive white color, covering power, and tough, flexible film-forming properties.


Example Sentences

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Wright adopted Caravaggio’s lead white ground and midbrown overlay, as well as his flushed cheeks, pale necks and fleshy pink velvets.

From The Wall Street Journal • Mar. 14, 2026

They both painted in contrasting dark and light hues, favoring palettes of darker, earthy pigments: bone black, ocher, umber, siennas and lead white.

From New York Times • Oct. 22, 2019

In the days before he started the painting, he explained, his longtime studio assistant, the painter Juan Gomez, had prepared the canvas by applying five undercoats—three coats of gesso and two coats of lead white.

From The New Yorker • Aug. 20, 2018

Walker also used lead white paint, Martin found; the forger used zinc white.

From The Guardian • Jun. 15, 2018

Cup of lather and moan moan stone grown corn and lead white and any way culture is power, Culture is power.

From Geography and Plays by Stein, Gertrude