Page:Cyclopedia of Painting-Armstrong, George D (1908).djvu/168

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CYCLOPEDIA OF PAINTING

be thinned to proper consistency with boiled oil. A small quantity of good varnish, one part to twenty, added to gold size, gives it hardness and additional luster. Good oil size will be ready to receive the gold at any time between twenty-four hours and a week from the moment of using it, and the longer it holds its tackiness the better is the result, provided that the size ultimately dries firm and hard, like a piece of gold-beater's skin.

Japanners' Gold Size is a quick varnish drying in about half-an-hour to two hours, and is ready for gilding as soon as sufficiently dry. It must be gilded upon at once when this is the ease, as the tack soon changes into a hard varnish surface.

Gilding can be done with varnish, but the excessive gloss gives a blackish look to the gold, and as the varnish hardens it loses its hold of the metal, which will then wash off with soap and water. Notwithstanding this fact, it is often used in large proportions added to gold size by certain decorators, who admire the additional gloss, but do not trouble about durability.

Many special sizes of a varnish nature are made for sign writers.

Water Gold Sizes vary in their nature for different purposes. For gilding on prepared wood, papier mache, plaster, or composition, as for picture frames, two kinds are used, burnish and matt gold size.

Burnish Gold Size is made from pipeclay and black lead, with a small quantity of mutton suet added in the grinding. It can be purchased ready made, and is used with ordinary parchment or gelatine size as a binding medium. Gilding on this size will take a good polish, or burnish with an agate burnisher.

Matt Gold Size. Matt size is for gold which is required to have a matt or dead surface, and is made from pipeclay, Armenian bole, and other materials. It can be purchased ready for mixing with the clear parchment or jelly size.