Glazing Glaze or glazing is a thin shiny coating, or the act of applying the coating; In Art it may refer to: Glaze (painting technique), a layer of paint, thinned with a medium, so as to become somewhat transparent Ceramic glaze, ...
Glazing Glass or acrylic set or made to be set in a frame that protects the artwork from light, dust and other environmental hazards.
Glazing The process of applying a transparent layer of oil paint over a solid one so that the color of the first is profoundly modified. Gold leaf (Also Silver leaf) Gold (or silver) beaten into extremely thin sheets; used for gilding.
Glazing An oil painting technique by which thin, transparent layers of oil paint are applied over an opaque layer to modify that layer's color.
Glazing: Glazing refers to the outermost layer found on ceramics that protect them from water and give them a decorative quality. Gold Leaf: Gold leaf is paper thin, hammered gold that is used for gilding, as a surface treatment.
Glazing Glazing is a similar watercolor technique to a wash, but uses a thin, transparent pigment applied over dry existing washes. Its purpose is to adjust the color and tone of the underlying wash.
Glazing 1. The process of applying a thin layer of oil paint over opaque, dry layers to modify the tone, produce highlights and a sense of transparency. Generally, a dark color is applied over a lighter one.
glaze/glazing - A glaze is a thin layer of translucent oil paint applied to all or part of a painting, to modify the tone or color underneath. Glazing is the process of using this technique.
Acrylic Glazing - A plastic alternative to glass. Anti-Bandit Glazing - Glazing that will not shatter if broken.
glazing...A technique of applying oil or acrylic color in thin, transparent layers so that the color beneath shows through, modifying the color of the glaze.
Glazing A technique used in painting in which pigment mixed with a transparent medium is layered, allowing underlying colors to show through. Glazing in ceramics is the process of applying glaze to clay work.
Glazing. This method is similar to a wash, but it uses very thin pigment applied over dry washes that you've already done. This in effect adjusts the color and tone of the wash underneath.
Low-fire, self-glazing porous clay developed in ancient Egypt. Elasticity The ability of a clay to be maneuvered without breaking.
antiquing - to finish or refinish by glazing, rubbing, striking or otherwise treating a newer object to give it an appearance of age and wear applied art - design or decoration of functional objects to make them appealing to the eye ...
Also used by artists in Antiquity as a glazing pigment. Available in shades of violet, true purple, and an exceptionally deep crimson, its use was limited by its huge cost of production. Ultramarine ...
KILN: an oven for drying, firing and glazing clay KITSCH: artwork, often mass produced, that goes beyond good taste To Top of Vocabulary LANDSCAPE: the scenery of an inland area, a painting or drawing of the land or natural environment ...
The technique of polychromed glazing of bricks was used. The Neo-Assyrian period, 1000-612 B.C. is a time of great builders. Kings adorned palaces with magnificent reliefs.
He is credited with the invention of the oil-glazing technique, which replaced the earlier egg-tempera method.
The unique result of such glazing is that the artist may create a multitude of colour combinations, not only through the effect of one colour beside the other ('traditional impressionism') but also on top of the other ('visionary impressionism').
But is it, in the hands of this fanatical painter, more laborious than the traditional method with prepared grounds, fixed outlines, studied light and shade, and careful glazing of tone upon tone?
The technique of glazing has a long history and is an integral part of many methods of oil painting including grisaille where the work begins as a monochromatic image. The work is then developed through several layers of glazing and overpaintings.
Alla prima is a style of painting where, instead of building colors up with layers or glazing over an underpainting, the painting is completed while the paint is still wet.
overglaze - A decoration applied to a ceramic piece after glazing. overlap - When one thing lies over, partly covering something else. Depicting this is one of the most important means of conveying an illusion of depth.
A spacer device placed between the glazing and the mount in a frame which prohibits the glazing material from coming in contact with the artwork. 2. An ornamental wood molding put outside the image and inside the matting of a framed work of art.
Grisaille: The technique of painting a highly-modeled, black and white monochromatic base painting and then glazing it with transparent colors.
BISQUE dull, fired ceramic clay before glazing. BLEEDING the tendency for some colors to show through a second layer of paint. BLENDING the transition of color from one tone to another; for example, in a sky.
Glaze: a thin layer of translucent acrylic or oil paint applied to all or part of a painting, to modify the tone or color underneath. Glazing is the process of using this technique. Gold leaf: an extremely thin tissue of gold used for gilding.
Underpainting Preliminary painting used as a base for textures or for subsequent painting or glazing. Unity A feeling of completeness is created by the use of elements in the artwork.
Hinging the artwork instead of mounting it, using high-quality acid-free boards and mats, using no staining paste, and glazing with conservation glass or acrylic are generally accepted procedures used to help preserve artwork.
About 1350 considerable quantities of colourless flat glass were supplied by John Alemayn of Chiddingfold for glazing the windows in St George's chapel, Windsor, and in the chapel of St Stephen, Westminster.
Varnish. Resinous transparent substance applied by painters to their works in order to preserve them - as distinct from glazing.
A light green or white paint layer is progressively and selectively darkened by superimposing layer after layer of tinted, transparent glazes. Color is modeled light to dark and the result appears natural. Color glazing does not muddy the colors.
In faience manufacture this refers to a glazing process in which the colored salts are mixed in the paste before fabrication. The salts rise to the surface during drying and form the glaze when the object is fired.
Grisaille A style of monochromatic painting in shades of gray, used especially for the representation of relief sculpture, or to simulate one. Achromatic painting. May refer to a gray underpainting, laid for subsequent color glazing.
close inspection, and minute examination you will discover, at last, the manner of handling, the artifices of contrast, glazing, and other expedients, by which good colorists have raised the value of their ...
He used canvas, burlap, muslin, linen, gauze, cardboard, metal foils, fabric, wallpaper, and newsprint.[60] Klee employed spray paint, knife application, stamping, glazing, and impasto, and mixed media such as oil with watercolor, ...
See also: Painting, Glaze, Movement, Oil paint, Tempera
 
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