Page:A Treatise on Painting.djvu/370

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
220
TABLE OF CHAPTERS.
Chap.
236. Of the Appearance of Colours. 116.
237. What Part of a Colour is to be the most beautiful. 117.
238. That the Beauty of a Colour is to be found in the Lights. 118.
239. Of Colours. III.
240. No Object appears in its true Colour, unless the Light which strikes upon it be of the fame Colour. 150.
241. Of the Colour of Shadows. 147.
242. Of Colours. 153.
243. Whether it be possible for all Colours to appear alike by means of the fame Shadow. 109.
244. Why White is not reckoned among the Colours. 155.
245. Of Colours. 156.
246. Of the Colouring of remote Objects. 339.
247. The Surface of all opake Bodies participates of the Colour of the surrounding Objects. 298.
248. General Remarks on Colours. 162.

COLOURS IN REGARD TO LIGHT AND SHADOW.

249. Of the Light proper for painting Flesh Colour from Nature. 36.
250. Of the Painter's Window. 296.
251. The Shadows of Colours. 101.
252. Of the Shadows of White. 104.
253. Which of the Colours will produce the darkest Shade. 105.
254. How to manage, when a White terminates upon another White. 138.
255. On the Back-grounds of Figures. 140.
256. The Mode of composing History. 92.
257. Remarks concerning Lights and Shadows. 302.
258.