RT Journal Article T1 Recovery of the traditional colours of painted woodwork in the Historical Centre of Lugo (NW Spain) A1 Prieto Lamas, Beatriz A1 Sanmartín Sánchez, Patricia A1 Pereira Pardo, Lucía A1 Silva Hermo, Benita María K1 Cityscape K1 Colour measurement K1 Pigment analysis K1 Rehabilitation K1 Traditional colours AB The rehabilitation of the degraded medieval quarter of A. Tinería, in Lugo (NW Spain) included the recovery of the traditional colours on plasters and woodwork. To achieve this aim, the paint materials on wooden elements (window frames and doors) have been characterised firstly by means of colour measurements on site, with a portable solid reflection spectrophotometer, and secondly by pigment analysis of paint samples, using OM, SEM-EDS and MRS. The results revealed that the predominant colour in the cityscape of the 19th and early 20th century was red, and that the paints contained red ochre of a local origin, in some cases with the addition of red lead. Other minor colours were identified as well: blue paints contained ultramarine blue or Prussian blue, yellow paints contained lead oxide and green paints were based on copper pigments or on a mixture of Prussian blue and yellow lead oxide. Extenders like barium sulfate, gypsum or calcite were often added to the paints. Finally, the turquoise paints were applied in recent times, as titanium white and phtalocyanine green (both industrially synthesised in the 20th century) were identified in their composition. These results have contributed to the elaboration of the Colour Plan of the Historic Centre of Lugo. The rehabilitation of A. Tinería is still ongoing and has received one of the United Nations’ International Dubai awards in 2008, recognizing good practices and local leadership PB Elsevier YR 2011 FD 2011-07 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10347/46095 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10347/46095 LA eng NO Beatriz Prieto, Patricia Sanmartín, Lucía Pereira-Pardo, Benita Silva, Recovery of the traditional colours of painted woodwork in the Historical Centre of Lugo (NW Spain), Journal of Cultural Heritage, Volume 12, Issue 3, 2011, Pages 279-286, ISSN 1296-2074, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.culher.2010.12.009 NO The present study was financed by the Xunta de Galicia (09TMT014203PR and 09SEC003203PR). P. Sanmartín and L. Pereira-Pardo would like to thank the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and the Spanish Ministry of Education for their predoctoral fellowships (BES-2007-16996 and AP2009-4421) DS Minerva RD 23 may 2026