Zaffre
Deep blue pigment
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zaffre (also spelt Zaffer in American English, see spelling differences), a prescientific, or alchemical substance, is a deep blue pigment obtained by roasting cobalt ore, and is made of either an impure form of cobalt oxide[1] or impure cobalt arsenate. During the Victorian Era, zaffre was used to prepare smalt and to stain glass blue.[2]
Hex triplet#0014A8
The first recorded use of zaffer as a color name in English was sometime in the 1550s (exact year uncertain).[3]