Imagine you're an artist in ancient Egypt, and all you have are sticks, charcoal, and some red ochre. You draw on papyrus or stone using your fingers or simple brushes made from animal hair. It's like drawing with crayons but even simpler! Over time, people started mixing colors by grinding minerals and adding them to water, just like making paint at home today.
Examples
- A child draws on the ground with charcoal from a burned log
Ask a question
See also
- How Do Paintings Survive for Hundreds of Years?
- Why Do Paintings Outlive Their Artists?
- How Do Painters Make Colors Last for Centuries?
- How Did Paintings Survive for Thousands of Years?
- How Do Painters Make Colors Appear to Change in the Light?