Tracing With Ink (1955)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
  • Demonstrates tracing on cloth. Shows procedures for
    handling the ink bottle and for filling, adjusting, using,
    cleaning and sharpening pens.
    We digitized and uploaded this film from the A/V Geeks 16mm Archive. Email us at footage@avgeeks.com if you have questions about the footage and are interested in using it in your project.

Комментарии • 42

  • @Liberty2357
    @Liberty2357 3 года назад +34

    As an engineer the reduction of drafting as a profession is a huge disservice. Even in the age of CAD. It’s like asking an author to do their own proofreading. Working with professional drafter is always better but hard to get management to see it that way.

    • @sethproaps8899
      @sethproaps8899 2 месяца назад

      Personally it also makes the early stages of design and brain storming harder, I can make complex designs in SolidWorks, but it always feels overkill and obtuse when drawing out ideas.

  • @mikewyndham
    @mikewyndham 3 года назад +12

    The guys a master. I hope my lines are that nice someday

  • @LiefWezeman
    @LiefWezeman 10 месяцев назад +7

    I go to Purdue University now. In my Freshman year I took a CAD class, which touched on making drawings by hand, but the modern curriculum has taken all of the skill and artistry out of the process. I collect drafting tools and practice drafting skills because I hope these skills are never lost, even though I recognize the efficiency of making drawings using CAD software.

  • @mwebb-01
    @mwebb-01 2 года назад +7

    They always did it better back in the day. Quality of the craftsmanship has deteriorated over the years. This is a good teaching video for sure.. Thanks

  • @SirWhiteRabbit-gr5so
    @SirWhiteRabbit-gr5so 4 месяца назад +1

    Drafting used to be its own profession within Architecture. In the 1930s, the highest paid employees at my grandfather's Architecture office were four draftsman who worked on the third floor manually copying sketches and existing drawings EXACTLY as drawn; human engineering copiers. When the copied drawings were no longer needed my grandmother washed and bleached them in her washing machine and cut them up into handkerchiefs; best-quality Linen cloth.
    When I was in Architecture School in the 1970s, only the railroads and the mining industry still used linen drawings rather than vellum paper. Inked linen would last 100 years until needed. Vellum deteriorates.
    A shortcut for draughting pens was to have one or two preset to the desired widths, similar to the Rapidograph pens they were still using in the 1980s on mylar.

  • @xxepic_swag_gamingxx5238
    @xxepic_swag_gamingxx5238 2 года назад +10

    Those are some seriously gorgeous tools. I wish they still made them like this… Although new old stock from well-known names like rotring isn’t particularly expensive.

  • @1337blackone
    @1337blackone 2 года назад +6

    i recently bought a vintage Dietzgen drawing tool kit just like the one used in this video and am ecstatic to find this instructional video so i might rediscover and explore this dying art.

    • @LiefWezeman
      @LiefWezeman 10 месяцев назад +1

      I love old Dietzgen tools! I have a few sets from them, both made in the US and in Germany.

  • @OofusTwillip
    @OofusTwillip 2 года назад +13

    Drawing inks, including India Ink, contain gum arabic as the binding agent. This makes them cling to the pen, and dry quickly and waterproof. This also clogs pens, which is why it must be removed from them quickly. And why drawing inks must NEVER be used in fountain pens.

    • @douglasscott464
      @douglasscott464 7 месяцев назад +1

      But fountain pen ink works very nice in ruling pens and in graph pens as well.

  • @alanadams9793
    @alanadams9793 3 года назад +12

    That is an excellent training video. Thanks very much!

  • @magicyellow7422
    @magicyellow7422 5 месяцев назад +1

    This video is a gem

  • @DazzlingAction
    @DazzlingAction Год назад +1

    This gem of a video should be shown to anybody getting into line art.

  • @txtele
    @txtele 3 года назад +4

    Thank you for posting

  • @newbbietrader9918
    @newbbietrader9918 2 года назад +4

    nice I AM LEARNING THIS IN 2022

  • @sweetmaths4213
    @sweetmaths4213 6 месяцев назад

    Really interesting! Thank You.

  • @Ignatius487
    @Ignatius487 3 года назад +4

    Unintentional ASMR

  • @PaulGDowling
    @PaulGDowling Год назад

    What a great instructional video. Love it

  • @travgusmc
    @travgusmc Год назад

    My home town West Lafayette! Purdue baby!

  • @alcyonecrucis
    @alcyonecrucis 2 года назад

    Love it

  • @wilfdarr
    @wilfdarr 3 года назад +6

    People used to be smart: it'll be a miracle if we ever get back to the moon.

    • @adamwiddowson8254
      @adamwiddowson8254 2 года назад +1

      There are still a lot of smart people out there, but they have moved on from these methods. That being said, this is an incredible lost art.

    • @mwebb-01
      @mwebb-01 2 года назад

      We never will in a general sense. But one can always strive for themselves.

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip 2 года назад +1

      Computers make it all so much faster and easier---until there's a power failure, or your systems get hacked. Then, you'd better know how to do things by hand.

    • @adamwiddowson8254
      @adamwiddowson8254 2 года назад

      @@OofusTwillip It would have to be a pretty catastrophic incident to be out long enough to mean doing it by hand is faster than just fixing the problem, obviously depending on the type of work. At my work the power went out for half a day, we paused production and claimed for what was affected on insurance and rebuilt it the next day.

  • @OofusTwillip
    @OofusTwillip 2 года назад +3

    If lines are drawn from left to right, this is fine for right-handed people, but left-handed people should draw from right to left.

    • @CSGraves
      @CSGraves 2 месяца назад +1

      Left-handed people hadn't been invented until 1956 😆

  • @SilvianoMangu
    @SilvianoMangu 3 года назад +2

    Alguien sabe para que le vierte talco??

    • @Generaly82
      @Generaly82 2 года назад +1

      En la vieja data es para absorber la grasa que podía estarse en el papel, en esa época los formatos eran sensibles a la grasa y humedad, por eso el talco

    • @OofusTwillip
      @OofusTwillip 2 года назад +2

      It's not talcum powder. It's sizing. It's still sold today. Calligraphers and draughtsmen use it to keep the paper from absorbing too much ink, causing feathering. You want the paper to absorb just enough ink that you get clean lines.

  • @iuliuscaesar9121
    @iuliuscaesar9121 Год назад +1

    Do you have more videos on technical drafting?

  • @westonlandis2234
    @westonlandis2234 Год назад

    What paper is this person tracing on and what powder is required for it? I have never seen this before. Thank you!

    • @emilyrobinson6080
      @emilyrobinson6080 7 месяцев назад +4

      Its actually a sort of thin cloth almost like a stiff silk scarf instead of conventional paper. The powder is called pouncing powder, its a very finely ground mild abrasive, usually pumice or similar, that helps scour the surface, roughing up any slicked down fibers and polishing away any oils and such that could prevent ink from adhering or that might cause it to run

  • @algermedina4523
    @algermedina4523 7 месяцев назад

    where can i buy this compass

  • @OofusTwillip
    @OofusTwillip 2 года назад +3

    They have to be told how to open an ink bottle? In an era when most people used fountain pens, and schoolchildren used dip-pens in class?

    • @jordantheallmighty
      @jordantheallmighty Год назад +5

      It's not the same ink that you would use for a fountain pen, this is much stickier when it dries because of the "gum arabic" added. This can glue the stopper to the bottle and be much harder to pop off and the bottles have the dropper making them different from dip pen bottles. You could easily make a mess if you weren't expecting that to be attached to the lid. This is also an instruction to inking where you are expected to not just "open a bottle" but do it one handed, refill a drafting pen, and replace the lid so that the fast drying ink isn't ruined or spilled. Some one using an ink well wouldn't cover it or stopper their bottle until they're done.
      I would say it's not that they have to be told how because they're not used to ink, it's more of a warning that this type of ink is difficult to work with.

  • @ChristopherSobieniak
    @ChristopherSobieniak 7 лет назад +7

    A lost craft.

  • @SimEon-jt3sr
    @SimEon-jt3sr 6 месяцев назад

    I was born in the wrong time