Burnt Sienna, cadmium orange, Mars orange, neutral orange, and orange or burnt Roman ochre, are all strictly permanent.
Any strength of tone can be obtained by repeating the washes, and should the colour be too powerful, it may be reduced by pouncing it with a soft wet sponge; or if too cold and blue, by a thin wash of burnt Sienna, merely the water stained.
For foregrounds, banks and roads, cattle and animals in general, burnt Sienna is equally eligible, both alone and compounded.
To an ordinary pot two-thirds full of lead well broken up add about a teaspoonful of chrome yellow and about half that amount of burnt sienna; some grainers prefer a very little Venetian red instead of the burnt sienna.
It is first done in oil; the colors necessary are raw and burnt sienna, burnt umber, Vandyke brown, and sometimes a little ivory black or ultramarine blue.
Burnt Sienna Is used with the greatest advantage in shading gold or silver (particularly the former), intensified with lamp-black.
The stems of the scrollwork may be, with good effect, painted in gold, and shaded up in burnt sienna, to imitate the bark of trees.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "burnt sienna" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.