Water gilding with metal leaf

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • You can water gild with metal leaf. It's a little different to water gilding with gold. But you can get a good look especially if you are mixing it with oil gilding.
    Gliding water, 4 parts water, 1 part isopropanol alcohol, a pinch of rabbit skin glue.
    Water gilding tools video • Basic water gilding tools
    UK
    METAL LEAF (Imitation Gold Leaf)
    www.goldleafsupplies.co.uk/go...
    USA
    METAL LEAF (Imitation Gold Leaf)
    www.gildedplanet.com/imitatio...
    Chapters
    00:00 Intro
    1:27 Different metal leaves
    2:00 Water gilding
    9:32 Burnishing
    11:43 Oil gilding
    12:21 End result
    www.buymeacoffee.com/ruthtappin
    Instagram goldinmycof...
    Twitter / goldinmycoffee
    Website www.ruth-tappin.co.uk
    #watergilding #metalleaf #imitationleaf #Dutchleaf #oilgilding #ruthtappin #goldinmycoffee #gildingcushion #gildingpad #gildingknife #gildingburnisher #gildingtip #gilding #bole #gildersclay

Комментарии • 70

  • @Pepsi_Please
    @Pepsi_Please 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hi Ruth!
    I just deleted my question. You'd already answered it in another comment.
    I can't get enough of your content. I've only been working on my 1st "real" project for.....
    🤔 FOREVER! 😂
    I admit, I've had to hold waiting to save $ for supplies, but I'm in for the long haul.
    Thank you so much for everything you've taught me here. ❤

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  7 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching. 😊 Hope it's going well. R

  • @AlessioFangano
    @AlessioFangano Год назад +4

    Always incredibly inspiring to watch you gild! Thanks for sharing this with us :)

  • @susanmitchell4744
    @susanmitchell4744 Год назад +1

    Wow! I think that is my favourite one. So inspiring Ruth. Have a great Christmas x

  • @kayleagzimmermann3091
    @kayleagzimmermann3091 Год назад +3

    I love watching your content. The patients you show with your craft and the skill live is mind blowing.

  • @masseykev
    @masseykev Год назад +1

    Awesome 👌

  • @dshe8637
    @dshe8637 Год назад +1

    I love your channel, having just discovered it by chance.
    I'm struck by the fact you actually have Renaissance type hair, that looks like it's been gilded too; proper Titian style 😁

  • @luhutsimatupang5213
    @luhutsimatupang5213 Год назад +1

    Waw very good 👍

  • @michaelflint4159
    @michaelflint4159 2 года назад +2

    Welcome back Ruth. Excellent work. To see you make mistakes and recover from them is very educational. I have some verigated silver in blue that I'm going to line the inside of a terracotta tube. Wish me luck 🤞
    Have a good week 👽

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад

      Good luck with that. There are some great tinted silver leaf colours. I never get to use them as all my customers all want gold. But when they see 'the rainbow' they may change their minds. 😂

  • @bander544
    @bander544 8 месяцев назад +1

    HELLO MY FRINDS IAM HERE BUCESE LEAREN EIGLSH VEREY VEREY VRREY VEREY THANK YOU .😊 .AND IAM FROM KSA WELCOME ALL TIME AGIN THANK YOU .😊

  • @1429376
    @1429376 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ruth, thanks again, nice video. On the web there are metal leaves in incredible colors. I
    so far i have used i
    classic colors but I'd be curious to try different ones. I tried to comment but I see that often the comment disappears, perhaps because I had put the links of the sites of Zecchi and Phase, I have seen that they have rabbit glues of different types, with different bonding power. I don't know. See you soon and thanks again, Manuela

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      Hi, the comments with links in are ment to be held somewhere but I can't find them, sorry.

  • @guilhermemendes4590
    @guilhermemendes4590 4 месяца назад +2

    I though we couldn't burnish the imitation gold leaf.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  4 месяца назад +1

      You can if you water gild it. But not if you oil gild it.

  • @paulmaryon9088
    @paulmaryon9088 2 года назад +2

    As always brilliant, I'm very excited and inspired with your work, would you recommend a good starting kit for a beginner? Great videos thank you.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +1

      Gold leaf supplies have some gilding kits www.goldleafsupplies.co.uk/beginners-kits/gilding-kits/

  • @Tabletsculptingtips
    @Tabletsculptingtips 2 года назад +3

    Hi Ruth, I really appreciate your videos. I’m in the process of watching all of them! Do you make your composition from scratch, or do you buy it ready made. It seems a bit expensive ready made here in the UK. If you do make it from scratch, I would absolutely love to see a video on how to do it. Does composition shrink much, or at all, when it hardens/dries? It looks like a fascinating material. As I said, I’d love to see how to make it, but if it’s a bit of a trade secret, I understand. All the best.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +4

      Hi Tom, I'd only do this year's videos if I were you, the ones for years ago aren't great. In the UK it would be my compo for sale, think I'm the only person making and selling to gold leaf supplies and wrights of Lymm. Unfortunately it does shrink, which is a pain. I'll make a video on compo at some point, but as I sell the compo I'll have to keep the recipe a secret, sorry. 😁 The videos depend on what I'm working on at the moment. Should be starting a nice Adam style mirror soon, so that might make a good compo video. R

    • @Tabletsculptingtips
      @Tabletsculptingtips 2 года назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder thanks for the reply. I think it’s really interesting that you’re supplying the uk shops with compo. I’ll feel better about buying some now! I guess it’s a really specialist thing. I actually make sculpture and was interested in trying it for some of the things I make. It’s a shame it shrinks - in my head I was dreaming that it could be a good alternative to epoxy putties in certain situations, but maybe it would shrink too much. I think I’ll still try a small amount though and learn what it can do. All the best.

  • @heartwormskillcats8357
    @heartwormskillcats8357 Год назад +1

    Your hands would look amazing with a French manicure :)

  • @MikeGolding1
    @MikeGolding1 Год назад

    Great series of videos, I have a question about water vs oil. I’m watching through all of the videos in the hope to gild a very large but not so intricate mirror frame that is installed in our French house above a fire place. I was thinking of using metal (imitation gold leaf) as many people say it’s easier for beginners, maybe I’m changing my mind after watching this. But my beginner question is why water guild some areas (the high points) and oil on others and not just all the same?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +1

      The frames after the mid Georgian period have traditionally been gilded this way. The easy, flat or high parts are simple to water gild. It's hard/time consuming to water gild decoration. So that is best to oil gild. You then get a contract between the burnisheds water gilding and the matt oil gilding.

  • @rajputfaraz8643
    @rajputfaraz8643 Год назад

    what do you use golu??

  • @JohnONeillLandscapePainting
    @JohnONeillLandscapePainting Год назад +1

    Hi Ruth. These videos are extremely helpful! Thanks for sharing. I’m gessoing frames with a flat section which I’d like to water guild and paint the rest. What order should I apply frame paint, bole and leaf? Should I paint the whole thing and then paint bole over the strip?? I’m a bit confused 😐

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +1

      A frame that is both paint and gilt is called parcel-gilt. I would put the bole on first where you want to gild, then gild. Then paint the rest of the frame. You will find the gold goes over where your gilding and so if you have painted first you have to paint over again anyway. So might as well do it at the end. Hope that helps.

    • @JohnONeillLandscapePainting
      @JohnONeillLandscapePainting Год назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder Ruth, thanks so much for this advice!! My instinct would have taken me in the reverse order with less than perfect results! You’ve helped me dodge that bullet! Much obliged 🙏🏼

  • @garywall1572
    @garywall1572 Год назад +1

    Hi Ruth, I was wondering about your oil gilding with metal leaf and wanted to ask what you finish it with to stop it tarnishing. Kind regards Gary. Ps love the videos.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +2

      Glad you enjoyed the videos 😊
      A clear shellac or something like www.goldleafsupplies.co.uk/modern-masters-sealer-effect/

  • @gazsto6733
    @gazsto6733 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ruth, used the metal leaf yesterday and all was good (I thought) then applied a lacquer coat, as it's for exterior use and I could see the lines between the leaf? I didn't notice this yesterday and it looked really good. Any idea why when I have applied the lacquer they appeared, also this is a very flat image (Tree of Life) that is to be attached to a planter box outside. I used the copper metal leaf and it did look very impressive, the colour was exactly how I had imagined, would I need to double leaf, like you suggested previously? Thanks Gaz

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +2

      Because the metal leaf is so much thicker than gold leaf it doesn't cover as well and doesn't fill in the gaps like gold leaf. The lacquer will have darkened the background ( the lines that won't fill in)
      I love the look of copper, but it's such a pain with finger prints showing up if you don't wear gloves. Oil gilding in cotton gloves is not much fun!

  • @1overhill
    @1overhill 2 года назад +2

    Hi Ruth,
    Whats your measurements for making the gild water , many thanks

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      The recipe for the gilding water is in the description. 😁

  • @AndrejBlazon
    @AndrejBlazon 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Ruth,
    Thanks so much for your videos, they are immensely helpful. I'm trying to learn this for a specific project. I have a flat surface with straight recessed v-grooves that change in depth and width and are basically covering the whole surface. When trying to water gild in one go over the grooves, naturally my metal leaf splits, when I try to push it into the groove and the result is awful, I'd say unpatchable. I want to have the top surface burnished and the grooves mat or even darker/patinated. Leafing each groove with a separate strip would be very tedious, the surface is very groovy :). I'm thinking about oil gilding the grooves and water gilding the top surface (high points).
    I am not sure about the order of application as you don't show the oil size application step here.
    I imagine the oil size goes on after all the burnishing has been done?
    Would it be possible to apply the bole all over, then seal, apply oil size all over and wipe it off the front flat surface with the help of some oil thinner to expose the bole just on the front surface and then do the leafing? That way I would hopefully avoid intricate brush application of oil/bole which I imagine would result in mistakes where they meet.
    How would you go about this?
    What is the correct order of application when combining bole and oil size?
    Thanks again!

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  5 месяцев назад +1

      You would water gild first and burnish. Then seal and oil the grooves. Any oil or sealer can be removed from the water gilding by paint stripper. But you have to be careful as this would removed any oil gilding it touched. Hope that helps. R

    • @AndrejBlazon
      @AndrejBlazon 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder That's excellent, you're the best! Thanks so much!!

  • @evanescentwave181
    @evanescentwave181 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ruth, Thanks for your hep in the past. Do you have a recommendation for the best burnishers, avoid scratches tec. - Thanks! Ian

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      I use a 24, dog tooth shape agate burnisher for almost all the burnishing.

    • @evanescentwave181
      @evanescentwave181 2 года назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder Hi Ruth, Do you have a preferred manufacturer? Thanks Ian

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      @@evanescentwave181 in the description of the water gilding tools video there is a link to the one I use from gold leaf supplies.

  • @micelab
    @micelab Год назад +1

    Hello Ruth, thanks for your informative content. I have a question...why use water and oil gilding on the same piece? How do you know where to use which type of gilding? Thanks again, John

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +1

      For antique frames Its around 10-20% water gilding the rest is oil gilding. This is so you have a contrast between the burnish water gilding and the matt oil gilding. Usually the high points are water gilded. But you can just copy what was there.

  • @freehee2
    @freehee2 Год назад +1

    Great video Ruth. When gilding with thin silver leaf do you make the liquor stronger with rabbit skin? Many thanks.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад +1

      Hi, no, there is so much rabbit skin glue in the bole, when you wet that you are activating that glue. Some people don't even put glue in the gilding water

    • @freehee2
      @freehee2 Год назад

      @@RuthTappinGilder I see. Just recently gilded a few frames in silver, had quite a bit of staining on the leaf… not sure if it’s the rabbit skin causing it or just limescale from the water. Thanks for your reply 😀

  • @robertsundardas974
    @robertsundardas974 2 месяца назад +1

    what kind of water glid do u use to stick the metal leaf and where can I get that scraper could u help me

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 месяца назад

      The recipe for the water is in the description. Sorry not sure what you are referring to with scraper, but in the description of water gilding tools video there are links to all the tools I use.

  • @drexplordinaire
    @drexplordinaire 4 месяца назад +1

    does it need to have no adhesives on before you varnish

  • @MKWHD
    @MKWHD 2 года назад +1

    Hi Ruth! Great video as always. What type of varnish do you put on top of the metal leaf? Does it not remove the nice glow from it?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      I didn't seal any of these as I want to see how long it takes for the metal leaf to tarnish. But something like Whitson’s Universal Lacquer would be good.

    • @MKWHD
      @MKWHD 2 года назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder Thanks. How about real gold but foremost real silver. Do you use any varnish on those?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +2

      @@MKWHD not for gold, you have to for silver, but I have stopped using silver, I now just use palladium or tin

    • @MKWHD
      @MKWHD 2 года назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder So palladium and tin does not oxidize as silver does?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +2

      @@MKWHD palladium won't tarnish. Tin probably will but not as bad as silver. I find tin a nicer colour than silver.

  • @guilhermemendes4590
    @guilhermemendes4590 4 месяца назад +1

    A question: is there a receipt to MAKE armenia bolus? Thanks!

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  4 месяца назад

      Same as making bole, here is a video on how to make bole ruclips.net/video/Ru88pxB-0FE/видео.htmlsi=Msn_VcYDjQRf4AhB

  • @jacquesomersavard7257
    @jacquesomersavard7257 Год назад +1

    at 2,45 min you cut gold leaft on black baord not the same as before it look ike it is (((( velvet )))) 'velour' tissue or some thing else maybe but a soft tissue to put gold left
    waht is this new baord surface ???

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  Год назад

      Sorry I understand now. The gilders pad is covered with suede. The black pad I'm using in this video is the Kölner gilders pad. I don't like it as it's too fluffy, so I use it for things like this, where using my good gilders pad might spoil it.

    • @jacquesomersavard7257
      @jacquesomersavard7257 Год назад +1

      @@RuthTappinGilder MERCI BEAUCOUP thank a lot now I can start

  • @OldBoyToy
    @OldBoyToy 6 месяцев назад +1

    Is it just plain water?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  6 месяцев назад

      The recipe for the water is in the description of the video.

  • @ghazaryansahak7929
    @ghazaryansahak7929 2 года назад +1

    What about oxidation? As far as I know water and metal leaf are not compatible.

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  2 года назад +1

      Yes you are right. So you would need to seal it after gilding. But for the amount of time the metal is wet before the water is absorbed into the bole (a few minutes) it doesn't creat a problem.

  • @Rk14-ly2hq
    @Rk14-ly2hq 11 месяцев назад +1

    Question......Why do you use both water gilding and oil gilding on the same piece?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  11 месяцев назад +1

      It gives a contrast and depth to the gilding. Matt oil gilding as the background and burnished water gilding for the highlights

    • @Rk14-ly2hq
      @Rk14-ly2hq 11 месяцев назад +1

      Hi Ruth, Thank you for your quick response! That has been on my mind for some time and you gave me a simple answer which I appreciate! I'm going to start gold gilding on metal picture frames. Can I use both techniques, water and oil and if so what do I seal my first coat with?

    • @RuthTappinGilder
      @RuthTappinGilder  11 месяцев назад

      @@Rk14-ly2hq just oil gilding for metal. Have a look at What can you water gild and why video.