CES020
New Member
I have a personal project I'm working on and I thought it was about time to dive into trying to use gold leaf.
I bought a starter kit that came with the powder stuff (can't remember the name, I'm not near it right now), a brush, a "mop" brush, the sizing, and a book of gold.
I v-carved some practice letters into a piece and painted the sizing on it. I let it dry as recommended on the sizing, and then took out a leaf and attempted to jamb it into the letter with the "mop". I think it went okay, but the leaf quickly came apart and the action of tamping it down into the letter produces a lot of very small gold particles. I just kept trying to get the leaf into the letter, and that meant poking a lot of the little "dust like" pieces into the letters as well.
In the end, I think it turned out okay for my first attempt, but not having ever seen it done before, I have no idea if that's right or wrong, acceptable or not acceptable.
Is that the normal practice, just keep "mopping" it until it's all covered? Or do you not want those tiny particles if you can help it? Is there a way to handle the leaf that's better than some other way?
Also, on the book of gold, it says "Glass" on it. What's that mean? I should only use it on glass? It's made for smooth surfaces only?
One more thing, the powder says it's used to keep stuff from sticking where you don't want it. The instructions that came with the kit said to put that all over and then paint over it with the sizing, where you do want it to stick. Is that standard or can I skip that?
I have 2 personal projects, one will be v-carved letters down into a piece, and the other will be prismatic letters with a black smaltz background. I'm guessing I should do all the gold, maybe clear it, and then do the smaltz? I wouldn't think you'd do the smaltz first, because I can see all the gold stuck in that. The smaltz won't hurt the gold while I'm doing it?
Sorry, lots of questions
I'll make it really clear, these are NOT paying jobs, just ideas I've had in my head for a little while now and it's time to let them out.
I bought a starter kit that came with the powder stuff (can't remember the name, I'm not near it right now), a brush, a "mop" brush, the sizing, and a book of gold.
I v-carved some practice letters into a piece and painted the sizing on it. I let it dry as recommended on the sizing, and then took out a leaf and attempted to jamb it into the letter with the "mop". I think it went okay, but the leaf quickly came apart and the action of tamping it down into the letter produces a lot of very small gold particles. I just kept trying to get the leaf into the letter, and that meant poking a lot of the little "dust like" pieces into the letters as well.
In the end, I think it turned out okay for my first attempt, but not having ever seen it done before, I have no idea if that's right or wrong, acceptable or not acceptable.
Is that the normal practice, just keep "mopping" it until it's all covered? Or do you not want those tiny particles if you can help it? Is there a way to handle the leaf that's better than some other way?
Also, on the book of gold, it says "Glass" on it. What's that mean? I should only use it on glass? It's made for smooth surfaces only?
One more thing, the powder says it's used to keep stuff from sticking where you don't want it. The instructions that came with the kit said to put that all over and then paint over it with the sizing, where you do want it to stick. Is that standard or can I skip that?
I have 2 personal projects, one will be v-carved letters down into a piece, and the other will be prismatic letters with a black smaltz background. I'm guessing I should do all the gold, maybe clear it, and then do the smaltz? I wouldn't think you'd do the smaltz first, because I can see all the gold stuck in that. The smaltz won't hurt the gold while I'm doing it?
Sorry, lots of questions
I'll make it really clear, these are NOT paying jobs, just ideas I've had in my head for a little while now and it's time to let them out.