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Stained Glass Work Part 3

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Take your camel hair matting-brush (fig. 27 or 28); fill it with the pigment, try it on the slab of the easel till it seems just so full that the wash you put on will not run down till you have plenty of time to brush it flat with the badger (fig. 29).

Have your badger ready at hand and _very clean_, for if there is any pigment on it from former using, that will spoil the very delicate operation you are now to perform.

Now rapidly, but with a very light hand, lay an even wash over the whole piece of gla.s.s on which the outline is painted; use vertical strokes, and try to get the touches to just meet each other without overlapping; but there is a very important thing to observe in holding the brush. If you hold it so (fig. 30) you cannot properly regulate the pressure, and also the pigment runs away downwards, and the brush gets dry at the point; you must hold it so (fig. 31), then the curve of the hair makes the brush go lightly over the surface, while also, the body of the brush being pointed downwards, the point you are using is always being refilled.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 27.]

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 28.]

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 29.]

It takes a very skilful workman indeed to put the strokes so evenly side by side that the result looks flat and not stripy; indeed you can hardly hope to do so, but you can get rid of what "stripes" there are by taking your badger and "stabbing" the surface of the painting with it very rapidly, moving it from side to side so as never to stab twice in the same spot; this by degrees makes the colour even, by taking a little off the dark part and putting it on the light; but the result will look mottled, not flat and smooth. Sometimes this may be agreeable, it depends on what you are painting; but if you wish it to be smooth, just give a last stroke or two over the whole gla.s.s sideways, that is to say, holding the badger so that it stands quite perpendicular to the gla.s.s, move it, _always still perpendicular_, across the whole surface. You must not sway it from side to side, or kick it up at the end of each stroke like a man white-washing; it must move along so that the points of the hairs are all just lightly touching the gla.s.s all the time.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 30.]

_How to Ensure the Drawing of a Face being kept Correct while Painting._--If you adopt the plan of doing the first painting over an unfired outline, you must be very careful that the outline is not brushed out of drawing in the process. If you have sufficient skill it need not be so, for it is quite possible--if all the conditions as to adhesiveness are right--and if you are light-handed enough--to so lay and badger the "matt" that the outline beneath shall only be gently softened, and not blurred or moved from its place. But in any case the best plan is at the same time that you trace the outline of a head on to the gla.s.s to trace it also with equal care on to a piece of tracing paper, and arrange three or four well-marked points, such as the corner of the mouth, the pupil of the eye, and some point on the back of the head or neck, so that these cannot possibly shift, and that you may be able at any time to get the tracing back into its proper place, both on the cartoon and on the piece of gla.s.s on which you are to paint the head. On which piece of gla.s.s also your first care should be that these three or four points should be clearly marked and unmovable; then during the whole progress of the painting you will always be able to verify the correctness of the drawing by placing your piece of tracing paper over the gla.s.s, and so seeing that nothing has shifted its place.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 31.]

It requires a good deal of patience and practice to lay matt successfully over unfired outline. It is a question of the amount and quality of the gum, the condition of your brush, even the dryness or dampness of the air. You must try what degree of gum suits you best, both in the outline and in the matt which you are to pa.s.s over it. Try it a good many times on a slab of plain gla.s.s or on the plate of your easel first, before you try on your painting. Of course it's a much easier thing to matt successfully over a small piece than over a large.

A head as big as the palm of your hand is not a very severe test of your powers; but in one as large as the _whole_ of your hand, say a head seven inches from crown to chin, the problem is increased quite immeasurably in difficulty. The real test is being able to produce in gla.s.s a real facsimile of a head by Botticelli or Holbein, and when you can do that satisfactorily you can do anything in gla.s.s-painting.

Do not aim to get _too much_ in the first painting, at any rate not till you have had long practice. Be content if you get enough modelling on a head to turn the outline into a more sensitive and artistic drawing than it could be if planted down, raw and hard, upon the bare, cold gla.s.s.

After all it is a common practice to fire the outline separately, and anything beyond this that you get upon the gla.s.s for first fire is so much to the good.

But besides the quality of the _gum_ you will find sometimes differences in the quality or condition of the _pigment_. It may be insufficiently ground; in which case the matt, in pa.s.sing over, will rasp away every vestige of the outline, so delicate a matter it is.

You can tell when colour is not ground sufficiently by the way it acts when laid as a vertical wash. Lay a wash, moist enough to "run," on a bit of your easel-slab; it will run down, making a sort of seaweed-looking pattern--clear lanes of light on the gla.s.s with a black grain at the lower end. Those are the bits of unground material: under a 100-diameter microscope they look like chunks of ironstone or road metal, or of rusty iron, and you'll soon understand why they have scratched away your tender outline.

You must grind such colour till it is smooth, and an old-fashioned _granite_ muller is the thing, not a gla.s.s one.

Now, after all this, how am I to excuse the paradox that it is possible to have the colour ground _too_ fine! All one can say is that you "find it so." It can be so fine that it seems to slip about in a thin, oily kind of way.

It's all as you find it; the differences of a craft are endless; there is no forecasting of everything, and you must buy your experience, like everybody else, and find what suits you, learning your skill and your materials side by side.

Now these are the chief processes of painting, as far as laying on colour goes; but you still have much of your work before you, for the way in which light and shade is got on gla.s.s is almost more in "taking off" than in "putting on." You have laid your dark "matt" all over the gla.s.s evenly; now the next thing is to remove it wherever you want light or half-tone.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 32.]

_How to Finish a Shaded Painting out of the Even Matt._--This is done in many ways, but chiefly with those tools which painters call "scrubs,"

which are oil-colour hog-hair brushes, either worn down by use, or rubbed down on fine sandpaper till they are as stiff as you like them to be. You want them different in this: some harder, some softer; some round, some square, and of various sizes (figs. 32 and 33), and with these you brush the matt away gently and by degrees, and so make a light and shade drawing of it. It is exactly like the process of mezzotint, where, after a surface like that of a file has been laboriously produced over the whole copper-plate, the engraver removes it in various degrees, leaving the original to stand entirely only for the darkest of all shadows, and removing it all entirely only in the highest lights.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 33.]

There is nothing for this but practice; there is nothing more to _tell_ about it; as the conjurers say, "That's how it's done." You will find difficulties, and as these occur you will think this a most defective book. "Why on earth," you will say, "didn't he tell us about this, about that, about the other?"

Ah, yes! it is a most defective book; if it were not, I would have taken good care not to write it. For the worst thing that could happen to you would be to suppose that any book can possibly teach you any craft, and take the place of a master on the one hand, and of years of practice on the other.

This book is not intended to do so; it is written to give as much information and to arouse as much interest as a book can; with the hope that if any are in a position to wish to learn this craft, and have not been brought up to it, they may learn, in general, what its conditions are, and then be able to decide whether to carry it further by seeking good teaching, and by laying themselves out for a patient course of study and practice and many failures and experiments. While, with regard to those already engaged in gla.s.s-painting, it is of course intended to arouse their interest in, and to give them information upon, those other branches of their craft which are not generally taught to those brought up as gla.s.s-painters.

CHAPTER V

Cutting (advanced)--The Ideal Cartoon--The Cut-line--Setting the Cartoon--Transferring the Cut-line to the Gla.s.s--Another Way--Some Principles of Taste--Countercharging.

We have only as yet spoken of the processes of cutting and painting in themselves, and as they can be practised on a single bit of gla.s.s; but now we must consider them as applied to a subject in gla.s.s where many pieces must be used. This is a different matter indeed, and brings in all the questions of taste and judgment which make the difference between a good window and an inferior one. Now, first, you must know that every differently coloured piece must be cut out by itself, and therefore must have a strip of lead round it to join it to the others.

Draw a cartoon of a figure, _bearing this well in mind_: you must draw it in such a simple and severe way that you do not set impossible or needlessly difficult tasks to the cutter. Look now, for example, at the picture in Plate V. by Mr. Selwyn Image--how simple the cutting!

You think it, perhaps, too "severe"? You do not like to see the leads so plainly. You would like better something more after the "Munich" school, where the lead line is disguised or circ.u.mvented. If so, my lesson has gone wrong; but we must try and get it right.

You would like it better because it is "more of a picture"; exactly, but you ought to like the other better because it is "more of a window."

Yes, even if all else were equal, you ought to like it better, _because_ the lead lines cut it up. Keep your pictures for the walls and your windows for the holes in them.

But all else is _not_ equal: and, supposing you now standing before a window of the kind I speak of, I will tell you what has been sacrificed to get this "picture-window" "like a picture." _Stained-gla.s.s_ has been sacrificed; for this is _not_ stained-gla.s.s, it is painted gla.s.s--that is to say, it is coloured gla.s.s ground up into powders and painted on to white sheets of gla.s.s: a poor, miserable subst.i.tute for the glorious colour of the deep amethyst and ruby-coloured gla.s.ses which it pretends to ape. You will not be in much danger of using it when you have handled your stained gla.s.s samples for a while and learned to love them. You will love them so much that you will even get to like the severe lead line which announces them for what they are.

But you must get to reasonably love it as a craft limitation, a necessity, a thing which places bounds and limits to what you can do in this art, and prevents tempting and specious tricks.

_How to Make a "Cut-line."_--But now, all this being granted, how are we to set about getting the pieces cut? First of all, I would say that it is always well to draw most, if not all, of the necessary lead lines on the cartoon itself. By the necessary lead lines I mean those which separate different colours; for you know that there _must_ be a lead line between these. Then, when these are drawn, it is a question of convenience whether to draw in also the more or less optional lead lines which break up each s.p.a.ce of uniform colour into convenient-sized pieces. If you do not want your cartoon afterwards for any other purpose you may as well do so: that is, first "set" the cartoon if it is in charcoal or chalk, and then try the places for these lead lines lightly in charcoal over the drawing: working thus, you can dust them away time after time till they seem right to you, and then either set them also or not as you choose.

A good, useful setting-mixture for large quant.i.ties is composed by mixing equal parts of "white polish" and methylated spirit; allowing it to settle for a week, and pouring off all that is clear. It is used in the ordinary way with a spray diffuser, and will keep for any length of time.

The next step is to make what is called the cut-line. To do this, pin a piece of tracing-cloth over the whole cartoon; this can be got from any artist's-colourman or large stationer. Pin it over the cartoon with the dull surface outwards, and with a soft piece of charcoal draw lines 1/16 to 1/8 of an inch wide down the centre of all the lead lines: remove the cloth from the cartoon, and if any of the lines look awkward or ugly, now that you see them by themselves undisguised by the drawing below, alter them, and then, finally, with a long, thin brush paint them in, over the charcoal, with water-colour lamp-black, this time a true sixteenth of an inch wide. Don't dust the charcoal off first, it makes the paint cling much better to the shiny cloth.

When this is done, there is a choice of three ways for cutting the gla.s.s. One is to make shaped pieces of cartridge-paper as patterns to cut each bit of gla.s.s by; another is to place the bits of gla.s.s, one by one, over the cut-line and cut freehand by the line you see through the gla.s.s. This latter process needs no description, but you cannot employ it for dark gla.s.ses because you cannot see the line through: for this you must employ one of the other methods.

_How to Transfer the Cutting-line on to the Gla.s.s._--Take a bit of gla.s.s large enough to cut the piece you want; place it, face upwards, on the table; place the cut-line over it in its proper place, and then slip between them, without moving either, a piece of black "transfer paper": then, with a style or hard pencil, trace the cutting-line down on to the gla.s.s. This will not make a black mark visible on the gla.s.s, it will only make a _grease_ mark, and that hardly visible, not enough to cut by; but take a soft dabber--a lump of cotton-wool tied up in a bit of old handkerchief--and with this, dipped in dry whitening or powdered white chalk, dab the gla.s.s all over; then blow the surface and you will see a clear white line where the whitening has stuck to the greasy line made by the transfer paper; and by this you can cut very comfortably.

But a third way is to cut the shape of each piece of gla.s.s out in cartridge-paper; and to do this you put the cut-line down over a sheet of "continuous-cartridge" or "cartoon" paper, as it is called, and press along all the lines with a style or hard pencil, so as to make a furrow on the paper beneath; then, after removing the cut-line, you place a sheet of ordinary window-gla.s.s below the paper and cut out each piece, between the "furrows" leaving a _full_ 1/16 of an inch. This sixteenth of an inch represents the "heart" or core of the future _lead_; it is the distance which the actual bits of gla.s.s lie one from the other in the window. You must use a very sharp penknife, and you will find that, cutting against _gla.s.s_, each shape will have quite a smooth edge; and round this you can cut with your diamond.

This method, which is far the most accurate and craftsmanly way of cutting gla.s.s, is best used with the actual diamond: in that case you feel the edge of the paper all the time with the diamond-spark; but in cutting with the wheel you must not rest against the edge of the paper; otherwise you will be sure to cut into it. Now, whichever of all these processes you employ, remember that there must be a _full_ 1/16 of an inch left between each piece of gla.s.s and all its neighbours.

The reason why you leave this s.p.a.ce between the pieces is that the core of the lead is about that or a little less in thickness: the closer the gla.s.s fits to this the better, but no part of the gla.s.s must go _nearer_ to its neighbour than this, otherwise the work will be pressed outwards, and you will not be able to get the whole of the panel within its proper limits.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 34]

Fig. 34 is an ill.u.s.tration of various kinds and sizes of lead; showing some with the gla.s.s inserted in its place. By all means make your leads yourself, for many of those ready made are not lead at all, or not pure lead. Get the parings of sheet lead from a source you can trust, and cast them roughly in moulds as at fig. 35. Fig. 36 is the shears by which the strips may be cut; fig. 37 is the lead-mill or "vice" by which they are milled and run into their final shape; fig. 38 the "cheeks" or blocks through which the lead pa.s.ses. The working of such an instrument is a thing that is understood in a few minutes with the instrument itself at hand, but it is c.u.mbrous to explain in writing, and not worth while; since if you purchase such a thing, obviously the seller will be there to explain its use. Briefly,--the handle turns two wheels with milled edges 1/16 of an inch apart; which, at one motion, draw the lead between them, mill it, and force it between the two "cheeks" (fig. 38), which mould the outside of the lead in its pa.s.sage. These combined movements, by a continuous pressure, squeeze out the strip of lead into about twice its length; correspondingly decreasing its thickness and finishing it as it goes.

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 35.]

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 36.]

[Ill.u.s.tration: FIG. 37.]

_Some principles of good taste and common sense with regard to the cutting up of a Window; according to which the Cartoon and Design must be modified._--Never disguise the lead line. Cut the necessary parts first, as I said before; cut the optional parts _simply_; thinking most of craft-convenience, and not much of realism.

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Stained Glass Work Part 3 summary

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