Subject: Wax seals
Kirsten Elliott <loopyla8 [at] yahoo__co__uk> writes >I am working on a printed document from England in 1786 which has a >red wax seal applied to one corner. Does anybody know what type or >nature of red pigments may have been used in wax seals around this >date? From the literature I have found it seems that it could be a >beeswax seal or a mixture of beeswax and mineral wax, is this >correct? There are 11 different recipes for seals from the 18th century in Johann Kunkel (Kunckel). Ars vitraria experimentalis oder vollkommene Glasmacher-Kunst, 1756, pp. 367-369. The different "composita" are: shellac (= gummi lacca), Venetian turpentine, gummi animi, gummi gutte, mastic, sandarac, borax, cinnabar, verdigris and turpentine. So no wax is being mentioned at this time. Unfortunately I only know this edition. Kunkel's book was first released in Franckfurt and Leipzig 1689 (3th edition from 1744) and it is a German translation of Christopher Merret's translation of Antonio Neri's book: Antonio Neri, L'Arte vetraria distinta in libri sette; nei quali si scoprono meravigliosi effetti e si insegnano segreti bellissimi del vetro nel fuoco, e altre cose curiose". L'arte vetraria, Firenze 1612. Reprinted in 1980 by Il Polifilo, Milano. 2nd edition, published variously in 1661, 1663, 1678, Firenze. Translated in 1662 from Italian by Christopher Merret as The art of glass, wherein are shown the wayes to make and colour glass, pastes, enamels, lakes ..., A. W. for Octavian Pulleyn, London. Translated by Christopher Merrett, edited by Sir Thomas Phillips, published in 1826 as Neri's Art of Glass, privately printed by Typis Media-Montanis [Middle Hill], England. Original version reprinted in 1980 by Il Polifilo, Milano. Ivan Bentchev Rheinisches Amt fur Denkmalpflege Abtei Brauweiler Pulheim-Brauweiler Germany *** Conservation DistList Instance 15:54 Distributed: Tuesday, February 5, 2002 Message Id: cdl-15-54-005 ***Received on Saturday, 26 January, 2002