NEW WHITES
WITHIN the past year White Pigments have made their appearance upon the market which bid fair to replace both Zinc and Lead Whites. All these new whites, which appear to be precipitated mixtures of Permanent White (Blanc Fixe) and Titanium,[17] have nearly double the hiding power of Flake White, but what is of greater importance is that they are not affected by any ordinary chemicals and gases and are light-proof and sulphur-proof.
From the experiments made by the author it would appear that a White of this nature is absolutely safe to use, can be mixed with any other pigment without interaction, and while it dries slowly it does not dry with the brittleness of Zinc although when Zinc White is mixed with a heavy bodied Linseed Oil it does not become brittle.
Another new White is Lithopone, which is a Zinc Barium compound that was discovered about twenty-five years ago. When this white was first exploited prophecies were made that it would soon replace Flake White, White Lead, and Zinc White, and that it was the most remarkable White that could possibly be made. As a matter of fact it has never replaced anything because it has a pernicious habit of turning dark in the bright sunlight and turning white again in the dark, but within the last few years light-proof Lithopone has been manufactured and its principal use is for foundation whites and for interior flat wall decoration. It is a pigment that should never be used for landscape or portrait painting but may very safely be used for ground work.
AMBER VARNISH
MANY painters believe that, owing to the fact that Amber is the hardest resin there is, the varnish made from it should retain its gloss the longest, and be just as free from cracking and bloom as the natural resin itself.
An examination of several of the amber varnishes on the market reveals the fact that there probably is no such varnish made. Although Amber can be fused and melted, it takes such a high heat that even the lightest gum Amber becomes exceedingly dark and then it must be diluted with so much oil that there is very little gum Amber in the varnish itself. Most of the Amber Varnishes on the market are Copal Varnishes that contain little or no Amber at all.
It is very wise for the painter to keep away from materials of this type; and, if a hard drying varnish is desired, any good Copal Varnish will answer the purpose, although for varnishing pictures, it must be continually borne in mind that a simple varnish like Damar, Mastic or Sandarac should be used; for only those simple varnishes can be easily removed without destroying the painting itself.
BLOOM
IT is not the intention of the author to go into any dissertation of the cause of bloom; for every varnish blooms more or less. In fact, all polished surfaces, whether they are varnished or not, show condensation, and surface deposits which are the equivalent of bloom.
Take for example, a mirror in your home; or a window glass; or a varnished piece of furniture. Unless these are continually wiped clean they will show a surface deposit, which is one type of bloom.
In paintings, bloom is the result of a variety of causes. Sometimes it is due to moisture which deposits. At other times it is due to the action of sulphur gases on the chemical compounds in varnish; and one of the most general causes is a surface deposit to which dust and foreign matter adheres. Some varnishes, like Mastic, bloom notoriously; and, if Mastic is to be used, it always should be mixed with ten per cent. of Spike Oil and five per cent. of heavy-bodied Linseed Oil. This, in a large measure, prevents the flatting and blooming of Mastic Varnish.
Damar Varnish, at times, shows the same defect, but not to such a great extent as Mastic, and Sandarac, the latter being an alcohol soluble varnish, which shows it least of all, has the defect of cracking very readily, particularly a year after it is applied.
Bloom can be removed in many ways: First, by gently rubbing with a silk handkerchief, which removes the surface deposit and polishes the underlying film of varnish; second, by taking heavy bodied Linseed Oil, diluting with half Turpentine, and applying that with gentle rubbing, which at once polishes the surface and removes superficial adherent bodies; third, by the use of any good, thin machine oil, such as is sold in this country under the name of “3 In 1.” A few drops of this may be applied on a linen handkerchief and gently rubbed, but then it must be wiped completely clean, because it is a non-drying oil, and dust and dirt stick to it with greater ease than they do to a drying oil.
Bloom also occurs in damp atmospheres, even on a painting which is not varnished. This is due to a certain physical—chemical cause, in which even dried Linseed Oil will absorb a certain amount of moisture. To overcome this, the painting should be placed in the warm sun, wiped clean, and then revarnished with a very thin varnish of either Mastic or Damar.
REPAINTING
MANY painters and restorers are uncertain as to what materials to use for retouching and repainting. Some use Tempera colors; and, after they are dry, they varnish the entire picture, and the results are usually very good. With this exception, the Tempera colors do not change, whereas the surrounding oil painting yellows and darkens in undue proportion to the new color applied.
The best method to pursue is to use dry pigments, which should be rubbed, or mulled on a glass plate with a muller, and mixed with dilute Damar Varnish. The chances are that a mixture of this type will dry in fifteen or twenty minutes, and the color can be matched up with the surrounding painting very exactly. In filling up cracks, flakes and holes in paintings, this method is really the best, because it insures matching, quick drying and very little decomposition.
RESTORATION AND CLEANING OF PAINTINGS
THE greatest possible care in the selection of a cleansing material must be exercised, and it is always wise to take the painting out of the frame and try the effects of various mediums in one corner, in order to determine whether it is safe to clean the painting or not.
The first requisite is to wipe off the painting with a rag that has been soaked in boiling water and then wrung out, in order to remove superficial adherent dust and dirt. If the painting is cracked, it is necessary to be exceedingly careful not to let any moisture get through the cracks, for it might soften up the glue underneath, in which case, large flakes may possibly curl from the canvas. After having cleansed the surface with water or, if necessary, with any good neutral soap water, such as Ivory Soap, Fairy Soap; or, better still, any shaving soap, an experiment should be made in a corner of the painting, to see if it has been executed with a drying oil, like Linseed Oil, or Poppy Oil.
The great danger in the cleaning of paintings lies in the fact that if a painter has used varnish as a medium mixed with his tube colors, nearly all solvents will attack such a painting, and the greatest trouble will result, because the paint itself will come off the surface. So, after having established—let us say, for instance—that the painting is a Linseed Oil painting, the following methods are perfectly safe:
Mixtures of equal parts of No. 1 Denatured Alcohol, Turpentine and Water, thoroughly shaken up, may now be applied with a very stiff bristle brush. This will remove the varnish without disturbing the film underneath.
Another good method to use is to take a soft tooth brush, dip it in Turpentine and gently rub the surface; and, if the varnish is of the single solvent type, like Mastic or Damar, it will come off perfectly clean without dissolving the Linoxin (dry Linseed Oil film).
The latest method is the use of Isopropyl alcohol, known commercially as Petrohol, which will dissolve most of the varnishes without dissolving the dry Linseed Oil film. Isopropyl alcohol can be diluted with Turpentine, Benzine or Kerosene, and when so diluted, can be copiously used.
The other method to be recommended is the use of a material called Cumene, or Cumol, which has the great advantage of dissolving varnishes without dissolving the Linoxin, provided, of course, it is used with a little common sense. It must be understood that the surface of the painting is a very delicate film, and in the restoration of a painting all that is necessary is to dissolve the superficial layer of old yellowed varnish and adherent dirt, and nothing else.
The author has made a series of modifications of Cumene, such as one third Cumene, one third Kerosene and one third Denatured Alcohol, which has the advantage of slowing down the action to such an extent that in case there is the slightest indication of decomposition of the painting itself, the solvent can be wiped off with a dry cloth or a cloth soaked in Kerosene, and the dissolving action will be stopped immediately.
The foregoing description is just the introduction to the various methods employed, and is not intended for novices or those unskilled in the art. At all events, great care must be exercised.
The author superintended the cleansing and restoration of fifteen paintings, some of them very large in size, which had not been cleaned or restored in many years, and some of these were in shockingly bad condition.
The Isopropyl Alcohol and Turpentine methods were employed without the slightest defect, and the varnish in every case came off perfectly clean, and when the pictures were revarnished, they were restored to their pristine condition. If it is desirable to give the picture a patine of age after it has been renovated, it is not a very difficult thing to do, if a slight tinge of a permanent Brown or Yellow Lake is added to the varnish; but, under no circumstances, must any bituminous or asphaltic compound be used for this purpose.
FRAMING
OUR tastes change with our culture. After the Civil War, when the first large crop of millionaires was made, all ornamentation, whether in picture frames, furniture or wall decorations, assumed a garish and bizarre effect. Gold and brilliant colors were used liberally, and to this day, many pictures are so badly framed that the effect of the picture itself is lost.
Many painters have only one exhibition frame, in which they show their paintings to prospective buyers and others, and some painters will not sell a painting without a frame, believing that they know best the kind of a frame best suited for the painting. We are rapidly changing our views on this subject, fortunately, and we are going back to what the Dutch and Flemish did three centuries ago, of having dark frames with a little gold or silver insert. It must be obvious to everyone that a somber painting in a six or eight inch glaringly brilliant yellow gold frame, destroys the value of the painting, for the eye, at all times, lights on the brilliant frame first.
The best example of this is the method in which etchings are framed. You seldom see an etching in anything but a half or three quarter inch flat, dark frame. If an etching were placed in a three inch gold frame, both would be out of place. Frames should always be subordinated to the painting. A blue and white seascape should be framed in a bluish gray frame, which may have a dark bronze moulding on the outer and inner edge. If painters want only one frame to show their work, let that one frame be of somber hue; otherwise it will detract from the painting.
Proper framing is really a scientific study. If the general tone of a picture be yellow, like a golden sunset, the complementary color would be a bluish green, and therefore a bluish green, with some gray in it, offset by a narrow metal colored moulding, would be the proper frame for a painting of that kind. Nothing is so hideous as brilliant gold on all the paintings in a room, and many a museum is spoiled through the glossy, inharmonious effects of the conglomerate masses of frames, which detract from the color value of a painting. A little care and study on this subject will frequently enhance the work in question.
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