What the Grade Labels Actually Mean: And How to Choose Without Wasting Money
Introduction
Walking into an art supply store or browsing watercolor paints online as a beginner presents an immediate problem: the options span a price range from inexpensive to genuinely costly, the labels use terms like student grade, artist grade, semi-professional, and professional without explaining what those distinctions mean in practice, and the descriptions on packaging are not always helpful for someone who has not yet used any of them.
The direct answer is that student grade paint of decent quality is the right starting point for most beginners. But that answer requires qualification, because student grade covers a wide range of actual quality, and the difference between the top and bottom of that range is significant enough to affect the learning experience in meaningful ways.
This guide covers what the grade labels actually indicate, what changes practically between categories, how to evaluate paint without brand-specific recommendations, and how to know when upgrading makes sense.
1. The Grade System: What It Actually Means
1.1 School Grade
School grade paint is formulated with the minimum amount of pigment necessary to produce visible color and the maximum amount of filler and binder to reduce manufacturing cost.
The result is paint that looks adequately colored when first applied but loses a significant portion of its intensity as it dries, often shifting toward a grey or chalky tone rather than maintaining the color that appeared during application.
The practical problems with school grade paint for learning purposes are specific. Colors mixed together produce results that are difficult to predict because the high filler content interferes with the pigment interaction.
Washes that look adequately saturated when wet frequently disappoint after drying. Achieving coverage comparable to student grade paint requires multiple additional layers, which compresses the paper surface and limits subsequent technique.
The most significant issue is not the quality of the finished result. It is that the beginner painter cannot accurately assess their own technique when the material is introducing variables that have nothing to do with the technique. When a wash looks muddy or faded, the painter cannot determine whether the problem was the technique or the paint. That diagnostic confusion slows learning considerably.
1.2 Student Grade
Student grade is a broad category that spans significant quality variation. At the top of student grade, paints have sufficient pigment concentration to produce vibrant, luminous results, mix cleanly and predictably, and retain a reasonable amount of their wet intensity after drying. At the bottom of student grade, the difference from school grade is modest.
The practical markers of a good student grade paint are pigment information on the packaging, a reasonable color range with consistent handling across different colors in the same set, and predictable wet-to-dry shift that the painter can learn to calibrate for. Student grade paint at this level is entirely sufficient for learning technique, developing color mixing skills, and producing genuinely satisfying work.
1.3 Artist Grade
Artist grade, which includes what some manufacturers call semi-professional and professional ranges, contains higher concentrations of purer pigments with less filler and binder.
The practical differences are visible: colors retain more of their wet intensity after drying, mixes are cleaner and more predictable, and certain pigment-specific properties like granulation and staining behavior are more pronounced and consistent.
The argument against starting with artist grade paint is not financial, although the cost is a factor. It is that the advantages of artist grade paint are most apparent to painters who already have sufficient technical control to notice and work with those properties deliberately.
A beginner who cannot yet reliably control water ratios and drying times will not consistently perceive the difference between student grade and artist grade results. The upgrade is most useful when it is an upgrade rather than a starting point.
2. What Changes Between Grades: The Practical Differences
2.1 Pigment Load and Coverage
The amount of pigment per unit of paint determines how much coverage a single brushstroke produces and how many layers are required to achieve a given tonal depth. Higher pigment load means more color with less paint and more predictable results when building layers.
In practical terms, this appears as the difference between a single loaded brushstroke that produces rich, even color and a single brushstroke that appears adequately saturated when wet but shows gaps and inconsistency after drying.
The painter compensates for low pigment load by applying more layers, but each additional layer on inadequately absorbent paint adds opacity rather than depth.
2.2 Color Retention After Drying
All watercolor paint dries lighter than it appears when wet. The degree of this shift varies significantly between quality levels. A good student grade paint might shift fifteen to twenty-five percent lighter, producing a dry result that is noticeably lighter than the wet application but still clearly vibrant.
Lower quality paint in the same nominal color can shift forty percent or more, producing a result that looks washed out or greyish compared to what the wet stage suggested.
The practical consequence is that painters working with high-shift paint spend significant energy compensating for a problem that better quality paint does not introduce to the same degree. That energy is better spent on technique.
2.3 Mixing Behavior
Clean, predictable color mixing is the foundation of effective watercolor work. When two colors are mixed and the result is consistently unexpected, either muddier or less vibrant than anticipated, it is difficult to develop reliable intuitions about how colors interact. Those intuitions are what eventually make mixing feel automatic rather than experimental.
Good student grade paint produces mixes that, once calibrated, behave consistently. The painter learns what this blue and this yellow produce together, and that knowledge is reliable across sessions. Lower quality paint produces results that vary enough between applications that the calibration is harder to develop.
2.4 Texture and Flow
Artist grade paints flow more smoothly from the brush to the paper and blend more naturally at wet edges. This difference is most apparent in wet-on-wet work, where the paint needs to move freely across a damp surface. Lower quality paint can have a slightly gritty texture in wet applications and may leave uneven deposits of pigment as washes dry.
3. Pans vs Tubes: Which Format to Start With
3.1 Pan Sets
Pans are solid cakes of dried paint organized in a tray. They are activated by wetting with a brush and require a small amount of work to load the brush with enough pigment for saturated applications. The advantages are portability, convenience, and the fact that the colors are already organized and ready to use without any setup.
The limitation of pans for learning is that loading sufficient pigment from a solid cake, especially in lower quality pans, requires more work than loading from tube paint, and the beginner painter may not immediately recognize when the brush is underloaded. This can contribute to the habit of working with too little pigment and too much water, which flattens results.
3.2 Tube Sets
Tube paint is a creamy, concentrated formulation that is typically squeezed onto a palette before use. Because the paint is already at a workable consistency, loading the brush with sufficient pigment for saturated applications is more straightforward.
The concentration also makes it easier to create highly diluted washes for transparent effects, since the starting point is more pigment than a pan surface provides.
Tubes used directly without a palette can be overwhelming for beginners because there is no built-in organization. The practical solution is to squeeze small amounts of tube paint into a palette with separate wells and allow them to dry, creating a set of custom pans that can be used like a pan set with the advantage of having started from a more concentrated formulation.
3.3 Which to Start With
Both formats work for learning. Tubes provide slightly more control over pigment loading and are more efficient for creating washes in quantity. Pans are more convenient and portable.
The choice is reasonably based on working context: painters who will be working primarily at home with a fixed setup may find tubes more versatile, while painters who want to work portably or in shorter sessions may find pans more convenient.
3.4 Liquid Watercolor: A Third Format Worth Knowing
A third format exists that is less commonly discussed in beginner guides but worth understanding before you encounter it in an art supply store: liquid watercolor.
Liquid watercolor comes in small bottles and is highly concentrated. A few drops diluted in water produce vivid, intensely saturated color. Because of its formulation, it dries without the same degree of lightening that pan and tube watercolor produces, which makes the wet and dry results more consistent. It also tends toward high transparency, which gives washes a jewel-like luminosity.
The reason liquid watercolor is not the standard recommendation for beginners is that it behaves differently enough from pan and tube watercolor to require a separate adjustment period.
It does not reactivate after drying the way pan and tube paint does, which limits the correction options available during painting. It also requires more careful handling to control the concentration, since very small amounts produce significant color intensity.
Once you have developed a foundation with pan or tube watercolor, liquid watercolor is an interesting addition rather than a starting point. A practical approach is to begin with three colors, a magenta, a cyan or turquoise blue, and a yellow, which together cover a wide mixing range.
Among the available options, Ecoline by Royal Talens is the most widely recommended liquid watercolor brand for artists who want a reliable, pigment-consistent product for this kind of exploration.
4. How Many Colors to Start With
A set of twelve to twenty-four colors is sufficient for all the techniques and subjects covered in beginner to intermediate watercolor work. The argument for limiting the starting palette is not about cost. It is about skill development.
A painter with twelve colors and a developing understanding of color mixing can produce a wider range of tones and effects than a painter with forty-eight colors who has not developed mixing skills. Every pre-mixed color in a large set is a color that could have been learned to mix, and the process of learning to mix is where color intuition develops.
Starting with a set that includes warm and cool versions of the three primary colors, a neutral, and a few additional colors for convenience covers the practical requirements of most painting situations without the set becoming a substitute for mixing knowledge.
For a complete guide to what colors can be mixed from a limited palette and how to get the most range from a small set, this Watercolor Color Mixing Guide covers the full process including complementary mixing, neutral creation, and palette construction.
5. Evaluating Paint: What to Look for and Where to Start
Understanding what the quality markers on paint packaging mean is genuinely useful, and the criteria below are worth learning. That said, the most direct path for a beginner is to start with a brand that is already known to perform reliably rather than evaluating individual products from scratch.
The criteria become more useful once you have some direct experience and want to make more specific decisions about which colors to add or replace.
What the packaging tells you
The pigment code is the most informative data point. Paint that lists a specific pigment code, such as PB29 or PV19, contains a single identified pigment. Paint listed only by color name without a pigment code contains an unspecified blend. Single-pigment paints mix more cleanly and predictably because there are fewer variables in the interaction.
The transparency rating indicates how the paint will behave in layering and glazing. Fully transparent paints allow light to pass through all layers and reflect from the paper beneath, which is what produces the characteristic luminosity of watercolor.
Semi-opaque and opaque paints sit more on the surface and block light, producing a different visual quality that is sometimes useful but is not the default goal for most watercolor techniques.
The lightfastness rating indicates how resistant the color is to fading over time. For practice work this matters less. For any work intended to be kept or sold, ratings of AA or A are the more reliable options.
Where to start: recommended brands
For most beginners, starting with a brand that is widely used and reliably consistent removes one variable from the learning process. Three student grade options consistently recommended by artists and instructors in the US market are worth considering.
Pentel Arts is a reliable student grade option with good pigment load for its price point, clean mixing behavior, and consistent performance across the color range. It is particularly practical as a starting set in tube format and offers a good balance between cost and quality for learning purposes.
Winsor & Newton Cotman is the most widely recommended student grade watercolor in the US market. It has notably good lightfastness for student grade paint, rewets reliably in pan format, and behaves predictably across all 40 colors in the range. It is available in both pan and tube format and is easy to find in art supply stores.
Sakura Koi is another frequently recommended student grade option, particularly in pan format. It is well regarded for its vibrant colors, portability, and consistent handling, and is a practical choice for painters who want a compact set for working in different locations.
For a first upgrade beyond student grade, Van Gogh by Royal Talens is the most practical step. It sits at the upper end of the student grade range and is widely available in the US. It offers higher pigment concentration than the three options above, better color retention after drying, and noticeably smoother flow.
It is the option most often recommended for painters who have developed basic technique and want to work with paint that responds with more nuance, without moving to the significantly higher price point of full professional grade.
6. Signs That Your Paint Is Limiting Your Progress
Most beginner painting problems are technique problems, not material problems. But some problems are genuinely caused by the paint rather than the painter.
Paint that consistently produces a grey or chalky result after drying despite correct technique is a pigment load problem. Paint that produces unexpectedly muddy mixes with colors that should produce clean results is either a pigment quality issue or a contamination issue that better paint would reduce.
Paint that requires an excessive number of layers to achieve any visible depth is providing insufficient pigment load for the technique being attempted.
The test for distinguishing technique problems from material problems is to apply the same technique with a better quality paint on scrap paper and compare the results. If the problem disappears, it was a material problem. If the problem persists, it is a technique problem that the material was not causing.
7. When to Upgrade
The signals that indicate readiness to upgrade from student grade to artist grade are specific and observable. The most reliable is when you consistently notice a gap between the result your technique should be producing and the result the paint is actually producing. This requires enough technical development to know what the technique should produce, which is itself a marker of readiness.
Other indicators include beginning to sell or exhibit work, where the longevity and color quality of artist grade paints has practical value, and wanting to explore pigment-specific properties like granulation, which only appear consistently in artist grade paint.
The most practical approach to upgrading is to purchase individual tubes of the colors you use most frequently in artist grade rather than replacing the entire set at once. This allows direct comparison between the two quality levels in actual painting situations and makes the differences immediately observable.
For a broader guide to all the material categories a beginning watercolor painter needs and how to prioritize spending across categories, this Do You Need Expensive Supplies to Start Watercolor Painting? article covers the full picture.
And for guidance on choosing paper, which has more impact on the learning experience than paint quality in many cases, this Best Paper for Watercolor Painting guide covers weight, surface, and material in practical terms.
Conclusion
The grade labels on watercolor paint packaging describe real differences in pigment concentration, mixing behavior, and color retention. Those differences are meaningful and affect the learning experience.
School grade paint introduces variables that make technique assessment difficult. Good student grade paint does not. Artist grade paint offers advantages that are most useful once sufficient technical control is established to perceive and work with them deliberately.
The practical starting point is good student grade paint in twelve to twenty-four colors, in pan or tube format based on working preference, with a commitment to developing color mixing skills rather than relying on a large set of pre-mixed colors. From that foundation, upgrading individual colors as specific needs arise is more effective than replacing everything at once.
Happy painting.




















