Stanton
New Member
Ya know what.... to use your phrasing, I'll be the first to call BullScat on your lame theory. Wherein it does work to an extent, it is not at all recommended by anyone who gilds for a living. I presume you just heard your theory through the grapevine of a buncha hacks.
Tell me how, when and where you would use your drops of paint [what kinda pint we talkin' here ??] to your size. The thread is all about gilding and gold leaf, so I'm not stepping on anyone's toes asking you, point blank, what you're talkin' about.
Hey Gyno, PLEASE leave me alone.
STOP sending me PM's
Seriously, enough.
I get it... you are full of yourself.
Calling me Stannie in your PM's, after I corrected you... my name is Glenn Stanton.
You are a total douche.
LEAVE MY THE **** ALONE !!!
That is not a question...
Gotta love the love here. I'll mix in a little One-Shot or Chromatic Yellow if I'm working a darker color surface and either black or blue for a lighter surface if I need to. And where did I get that info? Well, from the 'Gold Leaf Techniques' by Raymond LeBlanc who states, on page 89, that it is 'necessary to mix in enough color with them (sizes) so that the work will show up against the background. The less color used, the better the gilding characteristics will be, which is why the sizes are produced as clears'.
, when I was young and impressionable.