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  • Gilding a Frame
  • From "DIY Decorating & Design"
    episode DID-123
    advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    Restoration-quality gold leafing is a time-consuming process. The stages of restoration include (from bottom right) gesso finish, bole finish, gold-leaf application (top) and reduced or burnished finished (left).

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    Figure A

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    Figure B

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    Figure C

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    Figure D

    There are several materials with which to add gold accents to an item. The most expensive is gold leaf, which is pure gold pressed into very fine sheets (and it is very pricey). Alternatively, you can use composite gold leaf, gold foil (which is aluminum foil tinted gold), or gold paint. Dee Keegan, the founder of the Renaissance Trade School, gilds a wooden picture frame, showing the many steps involved in restoration-quality gold leafing.

    Restoration-quality gold leafing is a labor-intensive, time-consuming process. The extremely fine finish of restoration-quality gold leafing is attained by layering many coats of gesso and clay, which form a cushion for sheets of 24-karat gold, the purest and most expensive gold available.

    The process of gold leafing a wooden picture frame begins with a coat of shellac to seal the wood. Then many coats of gesso, usually about 12, are applied with a soft bristle brush (figure A). Each coat must be allowed to dry overnight and must be smoothed with fine sandpaper before the next coat is applied.

    After all the coats of gesso have been applied, several coats of pigmented clays, called boles, are applied to the surface. The layers of clay provide additional cushioning for the gold leaf, and the pigment adds luster to the finished piece. Boles come in different colors, including black, yellow and red. The luster provided by a black bole base is popular in the United States, whereas yellow topped by red is more common in Europe. Rabbit-skin glue is added to the dry clay pigment to create a solution that is brushed on the piece in layers. The piece receives five or six coats of bole, and each must be allowed to dry overnight.

    After the last coat of bole has dried, the piece is smoothed to a silky finish with 0000 steel wool (figure B). A gilding liqueur of denatured alcohol and distilled water is brushed on the frame, and a sheet of 24-karat gold leaf is carefully set on the piece. The gold leaf is gently dabbed in place with a soft-bristle brush (figure C) and allowed to dry. After drying overnight, the gold leaf surface is reduced with an agate-tip burnisher (figure D).


    RESOURCES :
    Gold-leafing kits from AMACO
    American Art Clay Co. Inc. (AMACO)
    Indianapolis, IN 46222
    Phone: 317-244-6871
    Fax: 317-248-9300
    Email: catalog@amaco.com
    Website: www.amaco.com

    Gold-leafing kits from Old World Art
    Old World Art
    Ontario, CA 91761
    Phone: 909-947-4928
    Fax: 909-923-1185
    Email: info@caldexcrafts.com
    Website: www.caldexcrafts.com

    Gold leaf and metallic powders

    Classes in furniture restoration and gold leafing by Dee Keegan

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