Ink patina - Antique Finish

Ink Antiquing is a method of attaining a beautiful patina on water gilded gold leaf. Lightfast ink is added to water size and water gilding proceeds as normal, the resultant gild is therefore tinted. The ink I have been using, Dr. Ph. Martin's Perma Draft, is a waterproof and lightfast drawing ink, although other brands of drawing ink will work as well.

The gild is not bright like standard water gilding but is a slightly dulled satin finish. The colour finds and accentuates all the tiny wrinkles and pinholes inherent in leaf. You can see the texture imparted to the leaf from its beating as well as the laplines. I sometimes deliberately try to get the gold to wrinkle up when ink gilding so as to increase the textural look.

Method

My prefered colour is 70% brown (chocolate mousse) with 30% black for a beautiful warm antique finish as shown above. Muted green colours also work well, in fact any muted dark colour. I have tried using watercolours but they don't have the same tinting strength.

On the left is 18 carat gold with green and black ink.

goldreverre - the glass gilding studio of Bruce Jackson tabletops - glass table items for sale glass gilding techniques - how to gild on glass
gallery of artworks - reverse painting
splashbacks - kitchen backsplash
history of verre eglomise
sign gallery - gold leaf windows
architectural - wall panels and surfaces
reference section
service information
swatches - samples of finishes
gilded signs and pub mirrors
other paintings - not glass gilding