Engraving Metals: With Numerous Engravings and Diagrams
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Paul N. Hasluck
Paul Hasluck (1854–1931) was an Australian-born writer and engineer, who moved to the United Kingdom before the 1880s. Hasluck was a leading writer of do-it-yourself guides and wrote technical handbooks. Alongside authoring 40 of his own works, Hasluck also edited many texts.
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Engraving Metals - Paul N. Hasluck
ENGRAVING METALS
WITH NUMEROUS. ENGRAVINGS AND DIAGRAMS
EDITED BY
PAUL N. HASLUCK
EDITOR OF WORK
AND BUILDING WORLD
AUTHOR OF HANDYBOOKS FOR HANDICRAFTS,
ETC. ETC.
PREFACE.
THIS Handbook contains, in a form convenient for everyday use, a comprehensive digest of the information on Engraving Metals by incision and corrosion scattered over nearly twenty thousand columns of WORK—one of the weekly journals it is my fortune to edit—and supplies concise instruction on the general principles of the subjects of which it treats.
In preparing for publication in book form the mass of relevant matter contained in the volumes of WORK, much had to be arranged anew, altered, and largely rewritten. From these causes the contributions of many are so blended that the writings of individuals cannot be distinguished for acknowledgment. However, it may be mentioned that much of the information given in this Handbook was contributed in another form to WORK by a Sheffield engraver.
Readers who may desire additional information respecting special details of the matters dealt with in this Handbook, or instruction on kindred subjects, should address a question to WORK, so that it may be answered in the columns of that journal.
P. N. HASLUCK.
La Belle Sauvage, London.
November, 1901.
CONTENTS.
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
1.—Engraver’s Bench and Stool
2.—Bench Block
3.—Nut for Bench Block
4.—Oilstone in Wooden Block
5.—Oilcan
6.—Set of Sandbags
7.—Engraver’s Eyeglass
8.—Eyeglass Stand
9.—Back of Angle Graver
10.—Belly of Angle Graver
11.—Back of Round-nosed Graver
12.—Belly of Round-nosed Graver
13.—Belly of Round-nosed Graver
14.—Back of Flat Graver
15.—Belly of Flat Graver
16.—Back of Shading Graver
17.—Belly of Shading Graver
18.—Scorper or Wriggling Graver
19.—Double Wriggling Graver
20.—Set-off of Graver
21.—Set-off of Graver
22.—Graver in Short Handle
23.—Worn Graver in Long Handle
24.—Outlining Chisel
25.—Narrow Flat Chisel
26.—Broad Flat Chisel
27.—Hammer
28.—Tracing Point or Etching Needle
29.—Scraper
30.—Oval Burnisher
31.—Spring Dividers
32.—Method of Sharpening Graver
33.—Practice Plate
34.—Method of Holding Graver
35.—Direction of Circular Cuts
36.—Colouring on Practice Plate
37.—Part Design on Waiter
38.—Design for Engraved Teapot
39.—Design on Oval Teapot
40.—Lettering on Pewter
41.—Boar’s Head
Crest for Pewter
42.—Engraver’s Bullet
43.—Support for Knife whilst Engraving
44.—Engraver’s Block
45.—Engraver’s Block
46.—Support for Ring whilst Engraving
47.—A M B Monogram
48.—A M D Monogram
49.—C V & Co Monogram
50.—B M B Monogram
51.—B M I Monogram
52.—J B Monogram
53.—D R Monogram
54.—B J Monogram
55.—E L T Monogram
56.—G C D Monogram
57.—H E B Monogram
58.—K Z Y Monogram
59.—L F Monogram
60.—H E B Monogram
61.—E W B Monogram
62.—G S T Monogram
63.—J W C Monogram
64.—T L F Monogram
65.—T G C Monogram
66.—S W Monogram
67.—V S & Co. Monogram
68.—E L Monogram
69.—H J E Monogram
70.—Method of Reducing Letter
71.—H T W Monogram
72.—S S G C Monogram
73.—A E T Monograin
74.—R T Monogram
75.—R M P Monogram
76.—H R Monogram
77.—M O T Monogram
78.—J R E Monogram
79.—G S M Monogram
80.—K K Monogram
81.—A D B Monogram
82.—H T B Monogram
83.—V G A Monogram
84.—J M Monogram
85.—Heraldic Colour: Ash Grey
86.—Heraldic Colour: Black
87.—Heraldic Colour: Blue
88.—Heraldic Colour: Gold
89.—Heraldic Colour: Green
90.—Heraldic Colour: Murrey
91.—Heraldic Colour: Purple
92.—Heraldic Colour: Red
93.—Heraldic Colour: Tawny
94.—Steel Plate set out
95.—Engraved Steel Plate
96.—Steel Plate for Circular Waiter
97.—Diagram of Shield on Steel Plate
98.—Three Sections of Steel Die for Embossing Coffee Pots
99.—Fourth Section of Steel Die for Embossing Coffee Pots
100.—Iron Ring for Clamping Die
101.—Engraving Name-plate
102.—Coffin-plate
103.—Coffin-plate
104.—Coffin-plate
105.—Coffin-plate
106.—Coffin-plate
107.—Tracing Punch or Tracer
108.—Matting Punch
109.—Relief Punch or Beater
110.—Cement Bowl or Sand-bag
111.—Snarling Iron
112.—Face View of Harness Crest
113.—Section of Harness Crest
114.—Etching in Relief
115.—Etching on Convex Surface
116.—Etched Club Shield
117.—Etched Club Shield
ENGRAVING METALS.
CHAPTER I.
INTRODUCTION AND TERMS USED.
ENGRAVING is the act or art of producing figures and designs on metals and other substances by incision or corrosion. Work that is done by incision is distinguished as dry-point; that engraved by corrosion is particularised by the name of the special process by which it is effected, as etching, mezzotint, etc. Dry-point is engraved with gravers and similar small tools, which are made to cut by the force of the muscles of the hand; for large work small chisels, struck with a hammer, are employed also. Various acids, usually compounded, are used in the different corrodent processes.
The practice of engraving is comparatively clean and inexpensive, and its elementary principles are easily learned. Ordinarily diligent pupils can make such progress as to give them encouragement to greater efforts, and by assiduous practice can become expert engravers capable of earning their living by the practice of the art.
Engraving is a very ancient art. Engraving on stone and on signets is mentioned in the early part of the Old Testament. In Exodus, Moses is directed to take two onyx stones and grave on them the names of the children of Israel. With the work of an engraver in stone, like the engravings of a signet, shalt thou engrave the two stones with the names of the children of Israel
(Ex. xxviii. 11). Job exclaims: Oh! that my words were graven with an iron pen and lead in the rock for ever
(Job xix. 25). The iron pen and lead
are strongly suggestive of chiselling out the letters and filling in the channels with lead, a process frequently adopted for monumental engraving. The Egyptian hieroglyphics on monoliths and on the walls of the tombs are engraved. The tools, weapons, and ornaments of the ancient Egyptians were often elaborately engraved. Chasing, carving, and sculpture, which are allied arts, flourished amongst these people. When the Israelites went out of Egypt amongst them were many skilled in the art of engraving, as frequent allusions show.
The Greeks learned the art of engraving and chasing in metals; it was much practised and had considerably advanced in the time of Homer. Many specimens of Grecian engraving show the excellence to which the art had attained. The Etruscans, whose vases and other works of art are still unsurpassed for beauty of form, appear to have attained the highest degree of skill in chasing. The principal chasing and engraving of antiquity was done on armour and weapons, goblets, dishes, etc. The laws of Rome were engraved on brass plates. The ancient engraving was in some cases used for marking impressions in plastic material, as wax, clay, etc., in the same way that seals are now used.
The discovery of a method of printing from engraved plates was the means of advancing the art very rapidly. Engraved blocks of wood were first used by the Chinese. As early as 1,000 years B.C. a notice of printing is found in the Chinese annals. It is, however, not till the thirteenth century of the Christian era that any notice of the process in Europe is found. Gutenberg, who is said to be the first who adapted printing to a useful purpose, was born in 1400, and Caxton, the earliest English printer, died in 1492; and it was not till about this time that printing was generally practised. The art of engraving on wood flourished as printing became more extensively practised.
To trace the history and development of engraving on metal is beyond the scope of the present work. The subject is, however, full of interest to those who intend to pursue the study and practise the art. An instructive book is Les Merveilles de la Gravure,
and a few notes culled from it will be entertaining. Maso Finiguerra, a goldsmith, engraver, and niellist of Florence, is credited with having made the discovery of copperplate printing in 1452. The traditional legend is that Finiguerra had just put the finishing touch to an engraving of a Pax, and, wishing to see the effect of his work, he filled the lines traced by his graver with a liquid composed of oil and lampblack. By chance a pile of damp linen was placed upon the engraved plate thus prepared, and the lines filled with the black liquid were reproduced upon the linen.
Niello work was much in fashion in the fifteenth century, and the mode of taking proof impressions should have suggested copperplate printing. The engravers took proofs of their work by impressing clay, and would not fuse the indestructible niello
until the engraving was perfected to satisfaction. In the course of time it was discovered that damp paper firmly pressed upon the engraved work, the lines of which had been previously filled with certain ink, showed a perfect imprint. This method of taking proofs on paper was adopted for a long time by niellists to see the progress of their engraving. Many of these impressions have been preserved, but those taken previous to the time of Finiguerra are evidently only proofs of inlayers’ work. That the engravings were not made to print from is obvious from the fact that the figures are shown left-handed. Had they been intended to print from the figures would have been reversed so as to show right-handed. It appears singular that this common mode of taking proofs did not at once suggest the art of printing from engraved plates.
After Maso Finiguerra had thus unconsciously discovered a new application for engraving, and a knowledge of the discovery had spread, many artists to whom the process of chasing and engraving was familiar worked in the new field. Euclid was printed in 1482 with diagrams on copper, and an edition of Dante (1481) contains prints from engravings executed on metal which, though accurately drawn, were evidently engraved by an unpractised hand.
Andrea Montagna, born at Padua in 1415, was the first artist of note who engraved plates to be printed from. As a painter his fame became great, and his works are much admired. A wish to see his compositions widely spread was probably his chief motive for adopting and fostering the art of engraving. Montagna’s prints ought, strictly speaking, to be considered the first engravings executed in Italy; until then the work had remained in the hands of the goldsmiths and metal-workers. Engravers kept pace with the general progress of art in Italy, but, after having produced works in which the feeling for colour and form is expressed with peculiar talent, they appear to have suddenly sunk into inactivity.
Albert Dürer, the German painter and engraver, rivalled goldsmiths in carving metal and artists in designing, whilst he excelled all in his knowledge of engraving. He drew figures and moulded outlines with inimitable skill. He worked with very fine gravers, and his engravings, executed in an infinite number of lines, necessitated slow and careful work. He excelled in every style; his landscapes, intersected and enlivened by rivers, and full of fortified castles and turreted houses, are engraved with a pleasing fineness of execution. Experts may discover errors in his aërial perspective, but any inaccuracies in the relative proportion is in a great measure atoned for by the delicate finish of the distances. Dürer’s engraved portraits show his great knowledge of physiognomy; his execution is always good, and his works are excellent models.
The capabilities of the etching needle appear to have been developed by Mazzuoli. Albert Diirer and many of his predecessors had used this process without much improving on it. Etching is, above all other, the kind of engraving best suited to a painter, and it will be easily learned by anyone with a knowledge of drawing. In tracing the design upon the ground the etching needle should not imitate the work of the graver. The process of etching enables the painter to promptly engrave his own conceptions, and dispense with the dangerous interposition of an interpreter. Mazzuoli had many pupils who successfully practised the art; one of these, Meldolla, worked in a style which is scarcely distinguishable from the master. The former, however, always used acid alone; the latter sometimes touched up his etching with dry-point tools.
William Hogarth, the English painter and engraver, claims a brief paragraph. He not only designed pictures, but engraved them, thus retaining their original style. He used the etching needle or the graver as readily as the brush, and his engravings not only possess all the good qualities of his pictures, but excel them in some points; his work is full of energy and character. His engravings were nearly completed by etching, and then skilfully touched up with dry-point tools. Hogarth was apprenticed to a goldsmith, and began life by chasing metal and engraving armorial bearings, figures, and arabesques on silver, gold, or bronze. Thus he acquired the manual skill of engraving with which he