We just moved house — boxes everywhere, everything labeled — and I noticed something strange. Every orange mark I made is still there, bright as the day I scrawled it. The yellow is already going ghostly. The white looks like it's been slowly erased by an indecisive universe. Same marker brand, same surfaces, same weather. And it turns out the answer isn't about the color you see — it's about the crystal structure of the pigment you don't see. Daniel sent us this one because he noticed the exact same thing with his Eddings. The question is: if you need maximum outdoor durability and visibility, which pigments are actually worth your money, and why does orange keep winning?
This is one of those topics where the answer is hiding on the side of the marker the whole time and almost nobody looks at it. Every industrial marker has a pigment number printed somewhere on the barrel or the technical data sheet. It'll say something like P.seventy-three or P.That little code is the entire story.
stands for pigment orange, I'm guessing.
The system is called the Color Index, and it's been around since the nineteen twenties. Every commercially significant pigment gets a CI number — P.for pigment orange, P.for pigment yellow, P.for pigment white, and so on. And the number after that tells you exactly which molecule you're dealing with. seventy-three is a completely different chemical from P.They're both orange to your eye, but under a microscope they're as different as steel and butter.
When I pick up an orange Edding and a yellow Edding from the same shelf, same price, same packaging, I'm actually holding two completely different technologies.
You're holding two different technologies that happen to share a plastic barrel. And the variation in how they perform outdoors isn't a manufacturing inconsistency — it's baked into the periodic table. So let's frame what we're actually up against here. There are three things trying to kill your markings outdoors. First, UV photodegradation — that's sunlight breaking chemical bonds directly. Second, mechanical abrasion — wind, dust, things rubbing against the surface. Third, chemical weathering — acid rain, oils, cleaning solvents, hydraulic fluid if you're in an industrial setting.
The unholy trinity of marker death.
Here's the thesis of this whole episode: pigment selection is the single largest determinant of how long your marking survives outdoors. It dwarfs binder chemistry, it dwarfs solvent choice, it dwarfs applicator tip design. If you get the pigment wrong, the best binder in the world won't save you.
That's a strong claim. Why does the pigment matter more than the glue holding it to the surface?
Because the binder can only protect the pigment from the outside. If the pigment is inherently unstable under UV, the binder is just a transparent window letting the photons through to do their damage. It's like putting sunscreen on someone who's already sunburned — the damage is happening at the molecular level, underneath anything you can coat on top.
Alright, so let's start with the fundamental distinction. You mentioned pigment versus dye earlier — what's the actual difference and why does it matter for outdoor use?
This is where we need to get the vocabulary right. A dye dissolves. It goes into solution at the molecular level — individual molecules dispersed in a liquid, like sugar in coffee. A pigment doesn't dissolve. It's a suspension of tiny insoluble crystalline particles floating in the binder, like fine sand in water. When the carrier solvent evaporates, the pigment particles are left embedded in the dried binder film on the surface.
One is a solution, the other is more like a slurry.
That distinction is everything for outdoor durability. Dyes fade because individual molecules can migrate, they can react with oxygen, they can be attacked by UV photons one at a time. Pigments are crystalline particles — they have a stable internal structure with strong intermolecular forces holding everything in place. A UV photon that hits a dye molecule might break it apart. A UV photon that hits a pigment crystal has to contend with the entire lattice.
Which brings us to orange. Why is orange the champion here?
Let's talk about Pigment Orange seventy-three. The chemical family is called diketo-pyrrolo-pyrrol — which is a mouthful, so everybody calls them DPP pigments. They were first commercialized by Ciba-Geigy in nineteen eighty-six under the trade name Irgazin DPP Red BO. The orange variants came a few years later in the early nineties. And the reason they're so good is their crystal structure.
What's special about the crystal structure?
DPP molecules pack together with an exceptionally strong network of intermolecular hydrogen bonds. Think of it like a three-dimensional lattice where every molecule is handcuffed to its neighbors in multiple directions. When a UV photon hits that crystal, the energy gets absorbed, but instead of breaking a chemical bond, it gets dissipated as heat through the entire hydrogen bonding network. The crystal basically shrugs it off.
It's like the pigment has internal shock absorbers.
The hydrogen bonds are the shock absorbers. And the practical result is that DPP pigments have five to seven times the UV resistance of the azo pigments used in most yellow markers. The ASTM G one fifty-five accelerated weathering test — that's the industry standard where they blast samples with xenon-arc light to simulate years of sun exposure — shows orange DPP pigments retaining about eighty-five percent of their color density after a thousand hours. That's roughly equivalent to a year of outdoor exposure.
Pigment Yellow eighty-three, which is what's in most industrial yellow markers including the Edding seven eighty, is a diarylide azo pigment. The key structural feature is the azo bond — that's a nitrogen-nitrogen double bond. And here's the problem: azo bonds are fundamentally weaker under UV. When a UV photon hits that bond, it cleaves. The molecule splits in half. The halves are no longer colored. And your marking disappears.
The yellow isn't fading in the sense of getting paler — it's literally being chemically destroyed.
Molecule by molecule. The same ASTM G one fifty-five test shows P.eighty-three retaining only about forty percent color density after a thousand hours. So you're losing more than half your pigmentation in the same time the orange loses fifteen percent. And that's under controlled lab conditions. In real outdoor exposure — direct sunlight, temperature cycling, moisture — the gap is often wider.
I saw this firsthand with our moving boxes. The ones that sat by the window for a few weeks — the yellow labels were already going pale. The orange ones looked like I'd written them that morning.
There's a field observation I came across in some materials testing literature — a pallet marked with white Edding seven eighty stored outdoors in Phoenix, Arizona showed visible chalking after six weeks. Same pallet, orange markings from the same batch of markers, still perfectly legible at six months. That's not a subtle difference. That's the difference between a marking that survives a project and a marking that vanishes before the project is finished.
Which brings us to white. You mentioned chalking. What's actually happening with white markers?
This is where the story gets genuinely fascinating and a little bit sinister. Pigment White six is titanium dioxide — TiO2. It's the most-produced pigment in the world by an enormous margin, about seven million tons per year, roughly sixty percent of which goes into paints and coatings. And it has a dark secret.
The most common pigment in the world has a dark secret.
Titanium dioxide is a photocatalyst. Specifically, in its anatase crystal form, when UV light hits a TiO2 particle, it generates reactive oxygen species — things like hydroxyl radicals and singlet oxygen. These are extremely aggressive oxidizing agents. And what do they oxidize? The very polymer matrix that's supposed to be holding the pigment to the surface.
So the white pigment is actively destroying the glue that keeps it attached to the thing I'm marking?
The pigment is eating the binder from the inside out. That's what chalking is. You're not seeing the pigment fade — titanium dioxide doesn't fade, it's a metal oxide, it's incredibly stable. What you're seeing is the degraded binder turning to powder and releasing the pigment particles. You run your finger over an old white marking and it comes away chalky — that's the pigment, freed from its binder by the binder's own destruction.
That's almost comically self-defeating. The most popular white pigment in the world is a suicide machine.
Here's the kicker — there's a fix for this, but you have to know to look for it. Titanium dioxide comes in two main crystal forms: anatase and rutile. Anatase is the photocatalytically active one, the one that generates all those reactive oxygen species. Rutile is much less active, and in high-end industrial applications, rutile TiO2 particles are given a surface coating — usually alumina or silica — that suppresses the photocatalytic activity almost completely.
A good white marker uses rutile with a surface coating, and a cheap white marker uses anatase.
Almost nobody puts this on the label. You'll see "titanium dioxide" or "P.six" and that's it. No distinction between anatase and rutile. No mention of surface treatment. It's a hidden spec that separates a white marking that lasts three months from one that chalks in three weeks. If you must use white outdoors, you need to find a technical data sheet that explicitly says "rutile TiO2" or "UV-stabilized white." And even then, expect to reapply every two to three months.
We've got orange with its hydrogen-bonded crystal fortress, yellow with its snapping azo bonds, and white with its self-destructive photocatalysis. That's the main cast. But you mentioned a dark horse.
Pigment Red one-oh-one. Synthetic iron oxide, chemical formula alpha-Fe2O3. This stuff has essentially infinite UV stability. We know this because iron oxide pigments have been found intact on cave paintings in Chauvet Cave in France dated to thirty thousand BCE. Thirty thousand years.
That's a pretty good accelerated weathering test.
It's the ultimate accelerated weathering test. Iron oxide doesn't fade because it's already fully oxidized — there's nothing left for UV or oxygen to do to it. It's thermodynamically at rock bottom. The tradeoff is chromatic. Iron oxide reds are dull, earthy, low chroma. They're the color of rust, because chemically they are rust. From more than ten meters away, an iron oxide red marking becomes essentially invisible.
It lasts forever but nobody can see it. That's a pretty significant asterisk.
Which is why orange hits the sweet spot. seventy-three has high chroma — it's vivid, it's visible from a distance — and it has high durability. Yellow has higher initial chroma but loses it fast. Iron oxide red has permanent chroma but low initial chroma. White has neither — it's not particularly vivid to begin with, and it self-destructs.
The pigment triangle of doom. Pick any two of vivid, durable, and cheap.
For most outdoor marking applications, you want vivid and durable, and you're willing to pay for it. But let's talk about why orange covers in one coat while white often needs two, because this gets into particle size effects that most people never think about.
I definitely noticed this. One pass with the orange Edding and the box was labeled. The white I had to go over twice on darker surfaces.
Pigment particle size is one of those second-order variables that has first-order effects on performance. Smaller particles — in the range of zero point one to zero point three microns — give you better opacity and color strength because they scatter light more efficiently. But they also have a much higher surface area to volume ratio, which means more surface exposed to UV per unit of pigment. That reduces lightfastness.
There's a tradeoff between hiding power and durability.
Larger particles — zero point five to one micron — are more UV-stable because there's less surface area for photons to interact with. But they're less efficient at scattering light, so you need more pigment to achieve the same opacity. The DPP orange pigments used in industrial markers are engineered at an optimal particle size that balances both — typically around zero point two to zero point four microns, which gives excellent opacity while the crystal structure handles the UV stability.
White TiO2 particles are often smaller because they need maximum hiding power — titanium dioxide has an extraordinarily high refractive index, which is why it's so good at being white — but that smaller particle size means more surface area, which means more photocatalytic activity, which means faster binder degradation.
You've just connected two dots that took me about six papers to put together. The very property that makes TiO2 such a brilliant white pigment — its high refractive index and optimal particle size for light scattering — is part of what makes it fail. Because to get that scattering efficiency, you need particles around zero point two to zero point three microns, which maximizes surface area, which maximizes photocatalytic degradation.
It's almost like the laws of physics have a grudge against white markers specifically.
There's another variable here that matters a lot for practical use: pigment loading. That's the weight percentage of pigment in the ink formulation. Industrial markers typically run fifteen to twenty-five percent pigment by weight. Higher loading improves opacity and durability — more pigment particles per square millimeter means more of them have to degrade before the marking disappears. But higher loading also makes the ink more viscous and harder to apply through a marker tip.
There's a formulation balancing act.
It interacts with pigment cost in interesting ways. DPP pigments like P.seventy-three are more expensive than azo yellows — we're talking maybe forty to sixty dollars per kilogram versus fifteen to twenty-five for P.So manufacturers have an incentive to use less DPP to keep costs down. But even at lower loading, the DPP chemistry is so much better that orange still dramatically outperforms yellow. Edding is believed to use a slightly lower loading of P.seventy-three in their orange compared to P.eighty-three in their yellow, and the orange still wins by a mile.
The chemistry is doing the heavy lifting even when the economics work against it.
Which brings us to the practical question at the heart of this prompt. If you're standing in the hardware store, or ordering online, and you need maximum durability and visibility for outdoor markings, what pigment numbers should you be looking for?
Give me the ranking.
Number one: P.seventy-three or P.Both are DPP oranges. seventy-one is a slightly bluer shade of orange, but chemically it's the same family with the same hydrogen-bonded crystal structure. This is the gold standard for outdoor industrial marking. The US Department of Defense uses orange for outdoor equipment marking under MIL-STD one twenty-nine specifically because field tests showed it retained legibility three times longer than yellow under desert conditions.
Three times longer. That's not marginal.
Number two: P.This is isoindolinone yellow, developed by BASF in the nineteen seventies specifically for automotive exterior paints requiring ten-year UV stability. It's much more stable than P.eighty-three because isoindolinone pigments have a different molecular structure with a ring system that's inherently more resistant to photodegradation than the azo bond. The problem is it's rarely used in markers. It costs about eighty dollars per kilogram versus twenty for P.Marker manufacturers choose the cheaper option because most consumers don't demand five-year outdoor durability from a four-dollar marker.
The better yellow exists, it's just not in the markers we're buying.
If you can find a marker that uses P.one-ten — and some high-end industrial paint markers do — it'll give you orange-like durability with yellow brightness. But you have to hunt for it. Number three: P.one-oh-one, iron oxide red. Permanent but dim. Use it when visibility distance doesn't matter and you need the mark to last essentially forever. Number four: P.seven, carbon black. Extremely durable — carbon black is basically elemental carbon, it doesn't photodegrade — but it's only useful on light-colored surfaces. On anything dark, it's invisible.
Where does white fit in this ranking?
Honestly, it doesn't. White is a special case. If you need white outdoors, you're not choosing the best white pigment — you're choosing the least bad one. Look for rutile TiO2 with alumina or silica surface treatment, and budget for reapplication every few months. Or consider using a white paint pen with a different pigment technology entirely — some use zinc sulfide or lithopone, but they have their own tradeoffs.
The actionable takeaway is: look at the side of the marker. Find the CI number. If it says P.seventy-three, buy it. If it says P.eighty-three, it'll fade. If it says P.six, it'll eat itself.
If it doesn't list a specific pigment number at all — if it just says "pigment blend" or "organic pigment" — assume it's the cheapest thing they could source, which means azo yellows and anatase whites. A manufacturer that's proud of their pigment chemistry puts the CI number on the label.
There's a practical tip I want to circle back to. You mentioned applying two thin coats of orange rather than one thick coat. Why does that help?
This is a clever little trick that exploits the physics of UV absorption. When you apply a single coat, all the pigment particles are in one layer. UV photons penetrate that layer and interact with pigment particles throughout. When you apply two thin coats, the first coat bonds to the substrate, and the second coat sits on top. The top layer absorbs the majority of the UV photons before they reach the bottom layer. The bottom layer stays protected.
You're sacrificing the top layer as a UV shield for the bottom layer.
And because DPP pigments dissipate UV as heat rather than degrading, the top layer lasts a surprisingly long time before it needs the backup. But when it eventually does degrade, the bottom layer is still fresh and fully pigmented. You've effectively doubled your UV budget.
That's a remarkably elegant hack. One more thing — you mentioned that orange DPP markers resist fuels and hydraulic fluids better than other colors.
The DPP crystal structure is chemically inert to hydrocarbons. Those strong intermolecular hydrogen bonds that make the crystal UV-stable also make it resistant to solvent penetration. Gasoline, diesel, hydraulic fluid — these are nonpolar hydrocarbon mixtures. They can't disrupt the hydrogen bonding network in a DPP crystal. Azo pigments, by contrast, have weaker intermolecular forces, and hydrocarbon solvents can penetrate the crystal lattice and extract pigment molecules or disrupt the structure.
If you're marking jerry cans, fuel lines, hydraulic reservoirs — orange is not just the most visible choice, it's the most chemically resistant choice.
For a completely unrelated reason that happens to align perfectly. The universe occasionally throws us a freebie.
Let's turn all this chemistry into something you can use the next time you're staring at a wall of markers. What's the decision framework?
Step one: identify your surface and your durability requirement. If you're marking something that'll be outdoors for more than three months, you need DPP orange or isoindolinone yellow. Step two: check the pigment number. Not the color name — the CI number. seventy-three or P.seventy-one is what you want. Step three: if you can't find those, and you need visibility, P.eighty-three yellow will work for about three to four months of direct sun before it fades noticeably. Budget for reapplication. Step four: avoid white entirely for outdoor applications unless it's specifically labeled as UV-stabilized rutile TiO2, and even then, plan to reapply every two to three months.
If you're in an industrial setting where markings need to survive for years?
Then you're looking at P.seventy-three orange or P.one-oh-one iron oxide red, depending on whether visibility or permanence matters more. And you're applying two thin coats, letting the first dry completely before applying the second. That's the protocol that gets you multi-year outdoor durability from a marker.
There's a warning here that I think is worth making explicit. A lot of people assume that buying a more expensive marker means getting a better pigment. That's not necessarily true.
It's one of the big misconceptions in this space. Many premium consumer markers use the same azo pigments as the cheap ones. The price difference goes into the applicator tip, the barrel design, the binder formulation, the brand marketing — not the pigment. You can pay twelve dollars for a marker with P.eighty-three in it, and a four-dollar marker from a different brand might have the exact same pigment. The pigment number is the great equalizer.
The other misconception you flagged earlier is that white markers fade because the white pigment reflects light. That sounds intuitive but it's completely wrong.
It's the opposite of what's happening. The white pigment isn't reflecting UV harmlessly — it's absorbing it and converting it into chemical reactivity that destroys the binder. If white TiO2 actually reflected all UV, it would be one of the most durable pigments available. Instead, it's a photocatalyst wearing a pigment costume.
The very thing that makes it white is what makes it fail. That's almost poetic.
The third misconception worth busting: the idea that all colors of the same marker brand perform identically. The binder formulation is usually optimized for one color — almost always black, because that's the highest-volume SKU — and then adapted for other colors. But the pigment chemistry is completely different from color to color. You're not buying "an Edding seven eighty" — you're buying P.seventy-three in an Edding barrel, or P.eighty-three in an Edding barrel. The barrel is just the delivery system.
The real product is the pigment. The marker is just how you get it onto the surface.
That's exactly the right way to think about it. And once you start thinking that way, you realize that most of the marketing around industrial markers is about everything except the thing that actually matters.
One last thing before we wrap — you mentioned there's a pigment we haven't talked about that might be the future of outdoor marking. Something about an Edding patent?
Edding filed a patent in twenty twenty-four for a UV-curable ink system that uses reactive pigment precursors. The idea is that instead of suspending pre-formed pigment particles in a binder, you print or apply a precursor molecule that crosslinks and forms the pigment crystal directly on the surface under UV exposure. It's like growing the pigment crystal in place rather than manufacturing it separately and then trying to stick it on.
You're forming the DPP crystal lattice after application, bonded directly to the substrate.
Potentially combining the durability of DPP with application characteristics that are much more forgiving — lower viscosity, better flow, better substrate adhesion. It's still in the patent stage, but if it works at commercial scale, it could change the whole equation for industrial marking.
That's exciting. And it raises an open question for our listeners. What about black markers? You mentioned carbon black is P.seven and it's incredibly UV-stable. But you also said it can catalyze binder degradation under certain conditions.
Carbon black is a semiconductor. Under certain conditions — high UV, high humidity, specific binder chemistries — it can facilitate electron transfer reactions that degrade the polymer matrix. It's not as aggressively photocatalytic as anatase TiO2, but it's not completely inert either. The exact mechanisms are still being studied, and it seems to depend heavily on the specific carbon black grade and the binder system it's paired with. That's a whole episode on its own.
Or a listener experiment. If someone out there has black markers on outdoor surfaces that have been exposed for a year or more, we'd love to hear what you're seeing.
More broadly, if you've done your own outdoor marker tests — orange versus yellow, different brands, different substrates, different climates — send us your results. We'll compile them into a listener-sourced durability database. The more data points we have from real-world exposure, the better our recommendations get.
Because accelerated weathering tests in a lab are useful, but nothing beats a marker on a pallet in someone's backyard in Arizona for six months.
Real-world data with real-world variables. Temperature cycling, morning dew, bird droppings, everything the lab doesn't simulate.
Alright, so to land this: if you're marking things for outdoor use and you want them to still be legible when you come back in September, buy orange markers with P.seventy-three or P.seventy-one pigment. Check the side of the barrel. Apply two thin coats. And if you're currently using white markers outdoors, go check on them. They might already be eating themselves.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: In the nineteen fifties, Mongolia's Lake Khövsgöl was home to a population of axolotls estimated at just under three thousand individuals — the only known wild axolotl colony outside of Mexico's Xochimilco basin, and one that has since vanished entirely.
Mongolia had axolotls.
In a lake. In the nineteen fifties.
If you found this useful — and if you're now walking around your house checking the CI numbers on every marker you own — leave us a review. It helps other pigment nerds find the show. This has been My Weird Prompts. I'm Corn.
I'm Herman Poppleberry. Go check your markers.