School Arts: Receipts
School Arts: Receipts
School Arts: Receipts
SCHOOL OF ARTS
OR
Fountain of Knowledge .
CONTAINING
•
- \ .
’
•'.\
RECEIPTS, .
PUBLIC IN general;
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"
1
I* .
And the
LONDON:
PRINTED AND SOLD BY DEAN AND MUNDAY,
35, THREADNEEDLE STREET.
https://archive.org/details/b21527672
I
CONTENTS.
MISCELLANEOUS.
P»ce
Composition to take off casts of medal 9 '
Strong cement ,
9
To prevent hay-stacks, taking fire ib .
1
The valuable fire ball, manner of making it, and use in families ib.
How a countryman may know how much hay or corn his bam
will hold before it is put in . 12
The measures that ought to be in cords or stacks of wood 13
To make artificial thunder and lightning 14
Chinese method of mending china.., ib.
;b.
iv CONTENTS.
rut
How to make oil cloth, very necessary to country people, or
tasmagoria ib.
White varnish 20
Excellent composition to take out stains or grease spots from
silk cotton or woollen ib.
To make a onmrrn-obscura 23
To take out ink stains, stains with fruit, &o ib.
things j
and the contrary ib.
,b -
To make sky-rockets ..,
To make mezzitintos
To blue swords and steels in general ib*
OF BEES.
How to order, preserve, swarm, and gather their honey* and
all matters relating to them..... 26
DYEING.
To dye a light carnation 31
For a deeper carnation ib.
. .
USEFUL RECEIPTS.
Receipt to make bronze figures, &c 32
Solder for tin or lead 3*7
To make liquid foil fur silvering glass globes, bent mirrors, &c. ib.
Three valuable re ceipts for liquid blacking for shoes and boots 4-J
iln
To intoxicate and take fish
l, ‘
Thunder powder *
30
Mahogany coloured cement
by the name of Bank-
To make portable glue; (commonly sold
note cement)
CONTENTS vii
PAINTING.
The practice of oil cojours, •
and painting timber-work after
the common method .
45
What colours are most suitable, & set off best with each other 47
Of colours that arise from mixture ib.
. STAINING WOODS.
To stain box wood brown 58
A fine black . . . ib.
i
VIII CONTENTS .
TO DESTROY VERMIN.
To —
destroy insects on wall-fruit trees
P!
g
To destroy —
snails — — —%
— g|
To out the nests of moles —
find — — — jb.
To destroy ants — — — — — — 62
To destroy bugs and worms wood — in — — — ib.
To destroy bugs — — — — — — — 63
,
Sure method of destroying rats and mice — — — ib.
— prevent troubling
flies cattle .
— — — — ib.
with veins that cross each other; and because artists, who
make inlaid works, have long attempted to colour it by
staining. The wood, when stained, can very easily be
freed from the dragon’s blood adhering to it, by means
of rectified spirits of wine, The spirit of turpentine
makes the wood more compact, and makes it more sus-
ceptible of a fine polish.
c
8 SCHOOL OF ARTS.
To harden quills.
larks, but all other birds that roost on the ground, among
which are woodcocks, snipes, partridges, quails, fieldfares,
and several others.
r
To make the London powder in]:.
infuse all in a gentle sand heat for six weeks shaking the
bottle four or five times, every day; then dissolve m it
four ounces of gum-arabic.
» use in families.
Take a ton of soft mellow clay, and as much dung as
•a illwork well, and is free from stones, to this clay is to
12 SCHOOL OF AUTS.
product by half the height above the beam add the two :
FEET. FEET.
First 18 Second 30
30 50
540 i 1,500
50 5
First 27,000
Added together.
Second 7,500
Divide by 400)34,500
stale white bread, heat these gently over a lire, and then
dip the part that is stained often in it; let it then dry,
and get in readiness a hot lather of soap and water, to
wash it immediately; and doing so in two of three wash-
ings it will quite disappear.
lG SCHOOL OF ARTS.
wet. If the hats are wry brown they may be brushed over
with writing ink, and dried before the varnish is applied.
Spirit of turpentine may probably be used in the place of
the spirit of wine.
White varnish.
Take of gum-sandarch, an ounce and a half; mastic,
in drops, half an ounce
;
gum-elemi, a quarter of an ounce
oil of spike lavender, a quarter of an ounce put them
;
•
Take good clear rosin, any quantity, melt it in an iron
pot; when melted entirely, let it cool a little, and, before
it begins to harden, pour in oil of turpentine sufficient to
keep it liquid when cold. In order to paint with it, let it
be used with colours ground with oil, such as are com-
monly sold in colour shops.
do soften ivory.
Slice half a pound of mandrake, and put it in-
the best vinegar, into which put a quart of
your ivory let it stand in
;
a warm place for forty-eight hours,
and you will be able
to bend the ivory to your mind.
1)2
22 SCHOOL OF ARTS.
stir till it is almost cold; cast it into fair water> and make
'
it up into rolls or cakes.
GREEN.
It is made after the same manner, and in the same pro-
portions as fine red hard sealing wax, by mixing with the
ingredients verdigrease instead of vermillion.
BLUE.
jnalt, or ultramarine.
PURPLE.
To make a camera-obscurai
Make choice of a room that hath a north light (tbougFf
an east or west may do very well) and let it be made so
dark, that no light ctn come in but at the hole where your
glass is to be placed, then make a bole in the shutter,
about an inch in diameter or something more, and set
open the casement, if there be one, for there must be no
glass beyond the hole; then fasten the glass with its centre'
to the centre of the hole, and at the distance the focus
of your glass is, hang up a white sheet, then will whate-
ver is without the hole, and opposite to it, be represented
on the sheet with such exquisite exactness as far surpas-
ses the utmost skill of any painter; for if the sun shines
brightly on the objects, you will have the colour ot all
things in their natural paint, but if the sun does not shine,
the colours w'ill be hardly visible; and you must by all
means prevent the sun’s shining near the hoie, for then ail
things will be confused. Observe that all things appear
inverted upon the sheet, to remedy which, take a common
looking-glass, of twelve or fourteen inches square, and
hold it near or under the chin, with ah acute angle to the
breast, and look down into it, and every thing writ appear
in their natural and erect position; and this reflection
also from the glass, has a glaringness that is very surpris-
ing, and makes it look like some magical prospect.
To polish ivory.'
1 <
20 240 960
2 40 280 1920
3 6() 720 2880
4 80 960 3840
5 100 1200 4800
A furlong, 40 perches.
A mile, 8 furlongs.
An acre of laud, 40 perches in length, and
4 in breadth.
A load of bricks 500 plain tiles, 1000,
:
JU ” e aullAu ust
P oSJlTt"r“ S - be CO
To
stain beech of a mahogany
colour.
Take two ounces of dragon’s blood,’
break it in nieces
and put it into a
quart of rectified spirits of
wine let tZ •
OF BEES.
How to order, preset ve, szcurm, and gather their
Nonet/, and all matters relating to them.
Secondly. —
Observe the swarm be whole and great,
which you may know by looking into the hive, or observ-
ing great numbers clustering about the month of it; but
if lliis way fail, put your mouth to the mouth ot the
hive* and blow in, and if you are answered by a great
humming noise, then it is full stock, but il with a little
SCHOOL OF ARTS. 27
them is in April, and let the place you remove them to,
be as like the situation you remove from as may be; and
upon a remove open them not in the day time, that by
resting in the night they may settle themselves, and find-
ing their hives open the next morning go the quieter to
work. However, for two or three days observe them,
that, And themselves in a strange place, they take not
wing and leave you, for if they all go out of the hive it is
a sign they are gadding.
Fourthly. — In
placing your bees, observe it be so that
in the winterand spring the face of the hives that they
are to come out at may stand to tne rising sun and ;
Seventhly. —
If the hive, by reason of the young brood
be over charged, which is perceived by their clustering
about the mouth of it and the great humming noise
within, prepare new hives, rubbed with sweet herbs,
and watch the coming forth of the young fry, from
eight to twelve in the morning, lest they take wing and
be gone ;and if they refuse to come forth, with the
fume of galbanum you may drive the whole stock ; and
if they have two kings, they will settle seperate from
each other, and so hive each by themselves; or if the
stock be decayed, you may incorporate two hives in
one, if you kill one of the master bees else there will
;
—
Eighthly. To know when the combs are full, watch
if they drive out the drones, which is a sign ; and soon
after you will see them playing about the hive, rejoicing
and neglectihg their work. By no means take the combs
"
To make mezzotintQs.
Mezzotintos are made in the following manner: take —
a well polished copper-plate, and, beginning at the corner,
rake or furrow the surface all over with a knife or instru-
ment made for that purpose, first one way and then ano-
ther, till the whole is of a regular roughness, without the
least smooth part to be seen in which state, if a paper
;
DYEING.
Take white gall and allum, the herb called foil, welt
dried, the quantity of a pound, two ounces of Spanish
red, four of Indian lake; boil them in fair water over a
gentle fire; when they come to the height of tincture dip
vour silks in them, and
them have good dippings,
let
three or four times, and the colours will take very well.
water, and it will not only be for present use, but keep
long ami be a very good black.
!
French moroon on silk.
or cotton*
O on
For orange silk
. A cherry red.
,
»
To dye purple.
In this case if you dye silk, you must take to each
pound of it an ounce of allum, and a gallon of water,
dissolving the allum therein over a gentle fire; then put
in the silk,' and let it continue there about four hours;
then take lake and indigo, each a quarter of a pound,
and a quart of urine; then add a small handful of cochi-
neal. beat them up into a dye, and dip your silks, fine
stuffs, or cotton into it as usual.
skin take the white of eggs and a iittle gum dragon, mix
the two together in half a gill of water, spunge over your
skin, and when dry polish it with a bottle or piece of
glass made for he purpose.
SCHOOL OF ARTS. 37
For yellozc
Lay the figure over with isinglass size till It holds out,
or without any part of its surface becoming dry or spotted
then, with a brush, such as is termed by painters a sash
SCHOOL OF ARTS, 39
sisting weather.
Boil one quart of milk, let it stand till cold : one ounce
of oil of vitriol ; one ounce of spirits of salts
shake-
;
40 SCHOOL OP ARTS.
To cut glass.
Another.
To
one pint of vinegar add half an ounce of vitriolic
ounce of copperas, two ounces of sugar cau-
acid, half an
dv, and two ounces and a half -of ivory black ; mix the
whole well together.
Another.
Sweet oil, half an ounce; ivory black and treacle, of
each half a pound ; gum-arabic, half an ounce ; vinegar,
three pints boil the vinegar, and pour it hot on the other
;
ingredients.
indicus, cummin
seeds, fenugrec seeds, and coriander seeds,
equal parts, reduce them to powder, and make them into a
paste, with rice flour and water; reduce this paste into
small balls of the size of peas, and throw it into sucli
ponds or rivers where there are fish, which, after tasting
thereof, will rise to the surface of the water almost motion-
less, and will allow themselves to be taken out by the hand.
Thunder powder.
Take good dry saltpetre, two
separately, tliree parts of
quarts of dry salt of tartar, and pound them well together
in a mortar ; then add thereto one part, or rather more,
of flower of brimstone, and take care to pound and mix
the whole perfectly together; put this composition into a
bottle with a glass stopper, for use.
SCHOOL OF ARTS. 45
PAINTING.
Thepractice of oil colours , and painting timber-zofirk
after the common method.
Common painting is the method of colouring doors,
windows, posts, rails, pales, gates, border boards for gar-
dens, or any other materials that require either beauty or
preservation from the violence of the rain, or injury of wea-
ther ;
the progress of doing it 1 shall lay down as plain as
I xan.
Suppose then there be a set of palisadoes, or a pair of
gates, or posts and rails to paint, and you would fi-
thoroughly dry , then take the white lead, well ground and
tempered up, not too thin, for the stiffer you work it, the
better body will be laid on and the thicker coat of colour
;
nished, cover the colours in the pot with water, for that
will prevent their drying, even in the hottest time.
when it has stood some time in the weather, the colour will
up just as pitch does, if laid on
crack and shrink
any tiling that stands in the sun; the cause of this is,
that the colour was not laid on with a stiff body, able to
hind itself on firm and fast.
SCHOOL OF ARTS-'' ir
What colours are most suitable , and set off best with,
each other.
By setting off best, is meant to have an agreeable ap-
pearance for two separate colours being put together, or
;
one next the other, will add much to the beauty of each :
as blue and gold, red and white, and such like colours
but green and black, or black and brown do not look well.
All yellows will set off best with blacks, blues, and reds,
AL1 blues set off best with whites and yellows.
But the most beautiful of all others for gold is the Ver-
million red, the smalt blue,and the lake, laid on a light
ground.
with black.
Pales and posts are sometimes laid over with white, and
is called a stone colour.
—
Note All painting intended to be white must have a
quarter of an ounce of Prussian blue mixed with every two
pounds of white lead T without which it will be a stone co-
-
When two coats of this paint has been laid on, it maybe
polished with a piece of woollen cloth or any other proper
substance, and it will become as bright as varnish. It is
certain that no kind of painting can be so cheap : but it
them well together, and bottle this also. Let any quantity
of white lead be ground very fine with spirits of turpentine
than add to it a sufficient portion of the last mixture, till it
be found fit for laying on. If, in working, it should grow
thick, it must be thinned with spirits of turpentine. This
iswhat painters call a flat or dead white, to distinguish it;
from common white paint, being substituted for the very
best internal work, both on account of its superior delicacy
and expeuce.
creation for the gentry, and others, who delighlin the know-
ledge of prints and maps which by being
;
coloured, and
the several divisions distinguished one from the other, by
colours of different kinds, do give a better idea of the coun-
tries they describe, than they can possibly do uncolourcd.
the liquor into a glass, stop it up, and let it stand to set-
tle till the liquor be very clear, so you will have a delicate
green but sometimes the verdigris net being always of a
;
time let it settle, and pour off the lye clear for use, which
:
you must close stop up; this is also a tincture that will
never decay, and may he made fainter or deeper, by boil-
ing more of the liquor away, to make it deeper, or by ad-
dingwater to make it fainter.
lye as will just wet it, and make it give forth its colour;
colour be yet too deep, and you will have a delicate purple
liquor or tincture. Then take a bit of alum, and with a
knife scrape very finely a very little of it into the tincture,
and this will take away the purple colour and nuke it a
delicate crimson. Strain it through a fine cloth into a
clean gallipot, and use it as soon as you can, for this is a
colour that always looks most noble when soon made use
of as it will decay if it be kept too long.
Indigo is another colour used in colouring of maps and
prints.
This is bought at the shops that sell paint, and it must
be ground very fine on a stone, as you do oil colours, with
a little tartar lye to make it give its colours, and look the
brighter; when it is ground perfectly fine like a thick syrup,
add gum water to it till it be thin enough for your purpose,
and keep it in a glass close stopped up ; but it will settle so,
that when you use it you must stir it up exceeding well
from the bottom.
For a yellow, gamboge is the best ; it is sold at the
druggist’s in lumps, and the way to make it fit for use, is
to make a little hole with a knife in a lump, and put some
water into the hole, stir it well with a pencil till the water
be either a deeper or fainter yellow, as your occasion re-
quires, then pour it into a gallipot, and temper up more,
till you have enough for your purpose.
fering them to sink into it: all that, are here mentioned
will lie fair and pleasant to the eye, and it is the fairness
of the colour is the art of map and print painting ; hut if
the paper be not good and strong, no .art can make the
colours lie well; therefore in buying maps and prints,
choose those on the thickest and strongest paper.
To make portable glue ( commonly sold by ,
the
name of Bank-note cement.)
Take half a pound of the best glue, boil and strain it
very clear ; boil two ounces of isinglass, put it in a double
glue pot, with a quarter of a pound of line brown sugar,
and boil it pretty thick, then pour it out into plates or
moulds when cold you may cut and dry them in small
;
A
fine black.
Having a copper fixed, or an iron pot, into which put six
pounds of chip logwood, and as much wood or veneers as
it will conveniently hold without pressing tight then fill ;
with water, and let it boil slowly for about three hours;
then add a quarter of a pound of powdered verdigris, a
quarter of a pound of copperas, and two ounces of bruised
nut-galls, filling the copper up with vinegar as the water
evaporates ; let it gently boil two hours a day till you find
the wood to be dyed through, which, according to the
khid, will be in more or less time.
add two ounces of aquafortis, and you will find the dye
strike though much stronger.
N. B. White holly is the best wood for this colour.
SCHOOL OF ARTS. 59
TO DESTROY VERMIN.
To destroy
snails .
Snails are great enemies to wall fruit; and in a dewy
morning you may easily find where they most delight to
breed but;
the best way to fiud out their haunts is in a hard
winter, and then destroy them ; they lie in holes of walls,
under thorns, behind old trees,- or old and close hedges.
H’you pluck not the fruit they have began to devour,' but
Jet it alone, they will finish their repast on this before they
begin another.
Tofind out the 7iests of 'moles.
,
bucks will run after the does, and those in the pots will
cry, and the others hearing them, will follow them even
into the pots; and they cannot get out again, they will •
there cry and fight till they have almost killed one another.
To destroy moles.
Strike down with a mole spear where you see- them
heaving, or lay traps in their paths under ground, in which
they will fasten themselves so that they cannot get out if
—
you are any thing quick. Or put brimstone, rosin, and
turpentine into a jug witli a narrow neck, and some tow
in it, to fire
it then put the neck into their holes, and it
will
;
—
them: Or make. a paste with hellebore roots,
stifle
To destroy ants.
Ants are destroyed by opening the nest and putting in
quick lime, and throwing Mater on it.
To destroy bugs and worms in wood.
An eminent physician has discovered that by rubbing
wood with a solution of vitriol, insects and bugs are pre-
vented from harbouring therein. When the strength of
this remedy is required to be increased, there need only be
boiled some coloquintida apples in water, in which, after-
,
To destroy bugs.
1. of turpentine, and with a brush wash over
Take oil
the bedstead and the nail holes, chinks, ike. it will kill
both bugs and kuits.
2. Rub the bedstead with verdigrease ground in linseed
and turpentine oil, and the bugs will not Labour.
Another.
Take a small branch of elder, put it into a tub of water
for two days then water your bed of turnips with the
;
To kill reptiles.
Pour into the holes a ley, made of wood ashes and lime
this will also destroy insects, if trees are sprinkled with it.
to them that they w ill even scratclr their skins from oft
their ow n backs to get it off, and will never abide in the
place where they have suffered in this manner.
SCHOOL OF ARTS. 65
by playing with him and letting him play with the mole,
he will come to find them out and kill them himself ; and
when he grows up and gets a thorough scent of them, he
will find them out and destroy three to your one.
take pains.
To destroy weazle s.
Take crude mercury, sal ammoniac, and wheat flour,
make them up in a paste with honey, and strew it in little
balls where their haunts are, when by greedily devouring
it they will soon die.
To destroy pismires ,
<!yc.
pan, that will endure heat, till they be red hot cool them
in fair water, and afterwards dry and beat them into pow-
der, and infuse a little of this powder into water, and
wherever you sprinkle it the pismires will die, or quit the
place.
anoint them all over with the lees or dregs of oil olive.
66 SCHOOL OF ARTS.
To take a polecat.
Get a flat, thick, square piece of timber, about an hun-
dred weight, broad on the upper side ; just in the middle
set it on a hooked crook ; fasten four forked stakes in the
FINIS.