Hot Pink and Hot Violet Lightfastness
Fluorescent pigments are a rarity, and most of those we tested failed to meet our standards. Weak pigmentation, runny texture, and painfully slow dry times made it clear: we could do better. So we did.
Our fluorescents deliver buttery texture, bold opacity, and maximum pigment load. With Hot Pink and Hot Violet you’re actually getting Artist Grade levels of pigment concentration. These hot colors don’t hold back and neither did we.
Yes, fluorescent colors have low lightfastness. It’s inherent to how they work: the same mechanism that gives them their glow also makes them vulnerable to UV light. Kept indoors and out of direct sunlight, their vibrancy will last much longer.
So, why make a color that isn’t 100% lightfast? Because fluorescent colors are about impact, not permanence, and there’s an immediacy to the punch they pack. Think of the 80s—a decade so loud we still hear its echoes in contemporary art, music, and popular culture. These colors aren’t meant to sit quietly behind museum glass. They’re made to electrify your artwork and gallery walls on opening night.

