Subject: Brass coatings
Reply to Alan Hawk's on brass coatings. The two resins you mention are covered in a book by J. Gauld Bearn, THE CHEMISTRY OF PAINTS, PIGMENTS & VARNISHES, London, Ernest Benn Ltd, 1925, p. 172ff: Coloured Resins For the sake of completion it is perhaps desirable to give here a brief description of some of the very many naturally-occurring coloured resins and woody fibres, such as gamboge, dragon's blood, grass tree gum, red and yellow sanders wood, and others, which were formerly largely used for the purpose of colouring spirit varnishes. These natural coloured resins have now been largely replaced owing to their lack of permanency by the synthetic coal tar dye-stuffs, and are now only used in special cases. Red Sanders Wood (Red Sandal Wood, PTEROCARPI LIGNUM) Red sanders wood is the heart wood of PTEROCARPUS SANTALINUS. It is imported in large heavy logs of a dark reddish-brown colour, the colouring matter of which is readily soluble in alcohol, but only sparingly soluble in water. For use in spirit varnishes the logs are cut up into chips, or, more often, rasped into a fine powder. ... (p. 173) Dragon's Blood This comes from various species of plants, but chiefly from the fruit of the CALAMUS DRAGO of Sumatra, Indo-China and Molucca.... It was formerly much used for colouring spirit varnishes, but is being gradually superseded for this purpose by the soluble spirit red aniline colours.... We have at the Freer a fair collection of older books on varnishes and varnish resins, as well as three samples of Dragon's Blood. I can't find any sandalwood here, though. These varnishes (which I assumed to be boiled oil varnishes with colorants) can be quite stable. I'd use restraint in removing them, and try to leave the original where possible. The final treatment of the metal substrate (polishing, scratch- brushing, etc.) is an important factor in the surface appearance, as well. Some articles have been published on treatment of old scientific instruments, but I don't have them to hand at the moment. Anyway, if you want to see some Dragon's Blood, The Department of Conservation and Scientific Research of the Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC has some! (since we're the national museum of Asian art, who could be a better source?) Tom Chase Head Conservator DCSR FGA/AMSG, SI *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:49 Distributed: Tuesday, December 27, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-49-003 ***Received on Tuesday, 27 December, 1994