Plant-based inks, handmade watercolors, natural pigments. Real botanical materials for artists who care what goes on the page.
Get Early AccessFor thousands of years, artists made their own materials. Walnut hulls for rich browns. Indigo leaves for deep blues. Iron gall for permanence. These aren't just pigments — they're living chemistry, refined by centuries of craft.
Verdivine brings that tradition forward. We source real botanical materials and turn them into art supplies you can actually use — inks that flow, watercolors that layer, stains that surprise. No synthetic shortcuts. No greenwashing. Just plants, pigments, and craft.
Writing and drawing inks made from plant extracts. Each bottle carries the character of its source — no two batches are identical.
Handmade watercolor pans from natural mineral and plant pigments. Ground, mulled, and poured by hand into individual pans.
Concentrated plant-based stains for paper, fabric, and mixed media. Age beautifully and shift subtly over time.
Plant-derived colorants safe for culinary use. Decorate cakes, color pasta, paint on fondant — all from real food sources.
Original designs by the founder. Cards, notebooks, and prints that pair beautifully with our inks and colors.
Bespoke ink blends, custom color palettes, and branded stationery. For studios, wedding designers, and small brands.
We forage, grow, and responsibly source botanical materials. Walnut hulls from local orchards. Indigo from small farms. Every ingredient is traceable.
Traditional extraction methods — cold-pressing, fermentation, mordanting — adapted for consistency without stripping character. No industrial solvents.
Each product is made in small batches. Inks are filtered and bottled. Watercolors are hand-mulled and poured. Stains are tested for lightfastness and archival quality.
Our walnut hull ink uses the same base recipe that Renaissance artists relied on for sketching and manuscript work. Iron gall ink — the writing ink of Leonardo and Bach — darkens from pale grey to deep black over hours as iron tannins oxidize on paper.
These aren't novelty items. They're functional art materials with centuries of proven use, made fresh in small batches you can actually work with.
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