Glass Painting Techniques in a Historical Context
Petri 
                    Anderson
                                  
              |  Detail of Peckitt's Alma Mater window depicting King George III at the Wren Library, Trinity College, Cambridge | 
                Stained glass painting techniques have not changed dramatically since the 
                earliest known examples of the craft back in 9th century Germany. Today, 
                as then, the first stage is the production of a full size working drawing. 
                Using this drawing as a template, the glass is selected and cut, and each 
                piece of glass is individually painted using glass paint. The paint is then 
                fired into the surface by heating the glass to approximately 650° centigrade 
                in a furnace. When all of the glass has been painted it is assembled into 
                panels by bending 'H' section strips of lead around the pieces of glass 
                and soldering the strips together where they meet.
                
                Broadly speaking this has been the process over the past ten centuries. 
                There have however, been several innovations, particularly in techniques 
                of glass painting, which have both enriched and added to the variety of 
                stained glass that can be appreciated today.
                
                Some of the techniques available in the medieval period were recorded by 
                Theophilus, a 12th century German monk who was also a glass painter. He 
                talked of the various metal oxides used in the production of different coloured 
                glasses. He also detailed the production of 'flash' glass, a thin layer 
                of coloured glass on top of a clear glass substrate, and described the process 
                of removing areas of the thin coloured 'flash' using an abrasive wheel, 
                which has the effect of achieving both a colour and white on a single piece 
                of glass. These basic methods of production are still used today, although 
                the flash is seldom abraded in the same way: modern techniques include etching 
                with hydrofluoric acid and sand blasting. With parchment then a rare and 
                valuable commodity, Theophilus and his contemporaries drew up their designs 
                on whitewashed tables. As paper and parchment became more accessible this 
            procedure was abandoned.
|  A glass painter tracing on a light table | 
In medieval stained 
                glass manufacture, the design was painted directly onto the coloured glass 
                panes, adding monochrome detail to a coloured base. The colour of the paint 
                itself was dependent on the amount and type of oxide used in its production, 
                but was usually black or brown. Until the 14th century the paintwork seen 
                on glass was predominantly applied by brush, with some further working with 
                sticks, quills and stiff coarse brushes once the paint had dried. This is 
                sometimes referred to as the smear technique, and it produced quite coarse 
                results. 
                
                A 14th century development in glass painting technique was the use of the 
                badger hair brush. This is a broad brush (some modern badger hair brushes 
                are 5'' wide) which is used as a dry brush on wet paint to soften the paint 
                effect and remove application brush marks. Frequently the badger brush was 
                also used to achieve a 'stippled' paint effect by pouncing the wet paint. 
                This allowed the painter to achieve a more refined appearance. Another addition 
                to the glass painter's repertoire was 'silver stain'. In the early 14th 
                century it was discovered that applying a compound of silver onto the glass 
                and then firing it would stain the glass anything from a pale lemon colour 
                to a deep orange colour. This discovery revolutionised stained glass. Suddenly 
                there were lots of new possibilities: for the first time colour could be 
                applied to the glass and controlled depending on the firing temperature 
                and thickness of the application. While the paintwork was confined to the 
                side of the glass that faced inwards, the silver stain was applied to the 
            outside face of the glass.
|  Detail of some Kempe paintwork from one of the North aisle windows at All Saints Church, Leighton Buzzard | 
                By the 16th century, enamels - coloured paints made from coloured metal 
                oxides, ground glass and a flux (usually lead oxide or borax), mixed with 
                water and gum arabic or lavender oil, and fired onto the surface of the 
                glass - were available to the glass painter. With such a large number of 
                colours now possible on a single piece of glass, a trend developed to produce 
                large windows using rectangular pieces of glass that had been painted, stained 
                and enamelled (see main illustration at top of page). No longer was the designer bound by the strict constraints 
                of leading off each and every piece of glass of a different colour. This 
                trend endured until the early 19th century. Two artists who grew to prominence 
                in this period were the van Linge brothers, Abraham and Bernard. Abraham 
                tended to work the paint quite vigorously for dramatic effect, whereas Bernard 
                had a slightly softer approach to glass painting.
                
                As the 19th century progressed there was a revival of interest in the gothic 
                arts and the majority of designers reverted to the medieval techniques of 
                producing mosaic stained glass, leading off separate colours. Different 
                paint techniques and effects were employed within these various design styles, 
                and were generally reliant on the media with which the paint was mixed. 
                Historically the liquids that hold the glass paint in suspension cannot 
                always be accurately determined, but from the styles of painting some educated 
                guesses can be made about the carrying liquids used.
            
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 Detail of some Clayton & Bell paintwork | 
Traditionally, the first stage in the painting process is to paint on the line work. This is done using a thick paint mixture. The painter will lay the glass over the working drawing and trace the line work onto the glass. Very often the traced paintwork will be left to dry thoroughly for a day or so and then other layers of paint will be laid over this line work and so the painting is built up. In this procedure, it is necessary to add a fixative to the paint to prevent it from lifting or smudging when the successive layers of paint are applied. Common additions for this purpose are gum arabic, vinegar and sugar. Vinegar is particularly effective and holds the trace line very well and it also aids the flow of paint from the brush to the glass, allowing for some delicate tracing. If the glass painter was reluctant to risk the trace line being adversely affected by paint laid on top of it, he could kiln fire the trace line before any further painting.
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The successive layers 
                of paint (known as matting paint) are usually mixed in a water and gum arabic 
                medium. Varying the amount of gum allows differing effects to be achieved. 
                Kempe, for example, would apply quite a dense layer of matting paint over 
                all of the glass, then use the badger brush to give the paint a heavy stipple. 
                This would then be worked using hog's hair brushes and needles to remove 
                paint from the highlighted areas. Frequently the needles would not only 
                remove the matting paint but also scratch into the trace paint, giving a 
                lot of contrast to the artwork and producing a crisp effect. In contrast, 
                John Hall & Sons would use a slightly tighter stipple and their glass 
                painters employed minimal use of hog's hair brushes when painting heads, 
                hands and feet. Instead they would predominantly use needles to laboriously 
                remove the paint where it wasn't wanted. This gave very precise effects 
                on the flesh tones. When they came to paint the drapery, however, they would 
                almost exclusively use the hog's hair brushes. 
                
                In several of the Victorian 
                  studios, glass painters used their hands to rub the stippled paint after 
                  it had dried so that the paint began to loosen and pores opened up on the 
                  paint surface. This loosened paint was then worked with hog's hair brushes. 
                  Varying the weight of paint, the gum content and the coarseness of the stipple 
                  would all have varying effects on the size of the pores that developed under 
            the pressure of the hand rub. 
|  | 
| Carl Parsons' cartoon  from the Chapel Studio collection | 
Many Clayton & Bell windows were characterised by a delicate, controlled opening up of the paint under hand pressure, an effect achieved by using a wet loose stipple, medium weight of paint and medium/heavy gum composition. To increase and deepen the soft dappled effect the same matting process was done on the back of the glass. In contrast, many painters of the Arts and Crafts movement such as Christopher Whall and Carl Parsons would use a denser matting paint with a heavier gum content. This was then rubbed vigorously to create pronounced textures in the paint, which were then further worked using hog's hair brushes, quills and needles. This paint style, combined with the rich antique glasses used in the Arts and Crafts period, resulted in some very free, expressive and at times dramatic stained glass. To convey the desired effect to the glass painter these designers tended to draw up their full sized cartoons (working drawings) on textured cartridge paper using charcoal which gave some similar effects to the paint style.
Many of the Victorian studios would not restrict themselves to just one trace paint and one layer of matting paint. Sometimes they used a vinegar trace overlaid with two water and gum arabic matts (the second matt just starting to lift and blend with the first matt) and then a lavender oil matt laid over the top of the two water matts. Few glass painters employ such a bold and confident attitude to glass painting these days, and with modern kiln technology and relatively rapid firing times consider it safer and more expedient to fire the glass at the various in-between stages.





