item: #1 of 5 id: A09192 author: Peacham, Henry, 1576?-1643? title: The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Pecham., gent. date: 1606 words: 19096 flesch: 66 summary: The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Pecham., gent. The art of dravving vvith the pen, and limming in water colours more exactlie then heretofore taught and enlarged with the true manner of painting vpon glasse, the order of making your furnace, annealing, &c. Published, for the behoofe of all young gentlemen, or any els that are desirous for to become practicioners in this excellent, and most ingenious art, by H. Pecham., gent. keywords: aboue; action; againe; annealing; appeare; arabeck; armoniack; art; beasts; bee; beginning; best; better; betweene; bice; bigger; bin; birds; black; blew; bodies; body; books; cast; cause; ceruse; chap; cheek; circle; cleane; coale; color; colours; country; crosse; cunning; cut; day; deepe; diaper; disposition; distance; double; draught; drawing; drawne; drie; easie; eebo; eie; eies; els; end; english; euen; euery; example; excellent; expresse; face; faire; fall; famous; farther; fine; flowers; folds; foote; forme; generall; gentlemen; giue; glasse; god; gold; good; great; greater; greene; grind; grinding; ground; gumme; gumme water; halfe; hand; hard; hath; haue; hauing; head; hee; horse; images; inke; inuention; iron; iudgement; kind; laie; lake; landtskip; latine; lead; leaue; left; lesse; let; lib; light; like; line; list; little; long; maie; making; manner; meane; men; midst; mind; moreouer; mouth; naturall; nature; neck; neere; neuer; nose; occasion; ordering; ordinary; ouer; owne; painter; painting; parts; peece; pen; perfect; picture; place; plaine; pleasure; practise; principall; proper; proportion; purpose; quantity; ready; reason; red; rest; rule; saffron; said; saith; scales; scarce; second; seene; selfe; set; seuerall; shadow; shadowes; shadowing; shape; shell; shew; short; sides; siluer; size; small; space; stiffe; stone; table; tcp; text; thereto; thē; things; time; true; violet; vnder; vntill; vnto; vpon; vpon glasse; vpper; vse; water; weake; wel; white; wil; worke; world; yealow; young cache: A09192.xml plain text: A09192.txt item: #2 of 5 id: A28779 author: Dürer, Albrecht, 1471-1528. title: A book of dravving, limning, vvashing or colouring of maps and prints: and the art of painting, with the names and mixtures of colours used by the picture-drawers. Or, The young-mans time well spent. In which, he hath the ground-work to make him fit for doing anything by hand, when he is able to draw well. By the use of this work, you may draw all parts of a man, leggs, armes, hands and feet, severally, and together. And directions for birds, beasts, landskips, ships, and the like. Moreover, you may learn by this tract, to make all sorts of colours; and to grinde and lay them: and to make colours out of colours: and to make gold and silver to write with. How also to diaper and shadow things, and to heighthen them, to stand off: to deepen them, and make them glitter. In this book you have the necessary instruments for drawing, and the use of them, and how to make artificiall pastels to draw withall. Very usefull for all handicrafts, and ingenuous gentlemen and youths. By hammer and hand all arts doe stand. date: 1652 words: 15615 flesch: 70 summary: ' The proportion of the Hand 〈◊〉 of 3 measures of the Nose , of 〈◊〉 : you are to make the three equall pricked squares , marked perpendicularly 1. 3. 2. the lowest of which 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 into 2 〈◊〉 parts therby to adIoyne a halfe making a third part unto that base marked also 〈◊〉 . which we give 〈◊〉 the Balle of the Thumb and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 neare unto 〈◊〉 . 〈◊〉 take a ruler and a black-lead plummet made an even square ; now , you must divide 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into divers equal parts with a pair of compasses , and draw lines with a 〈◊〉 and black lead plummet quite over the picture , make also other lines acrosse , so that 〈◊〉 picture may be divided into equall squares , then take a faire paper and make 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon it as there is in the picture ; you may make them as little as 〈◊〉 will , but be sure they are equall in number with those in the Picture , having 〈◊〉 drawne 〈◊〉 the picture and paper into squares ; take a black-lead pen and draw the picture by little and little , passing from square to square , and in what part of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 picture lies , in that same square put the drawing , and in the same place of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the paper untill you have finished the whole , then draw it over with a pen , in which second drawing of it over you may easily mend any fault ; when it is 〈◊〉 it over with the crumme of white bread , and it will take off all the black - 〈◊〉 stroakes , and your draft onely will remaine faire upon the paper . keywords: art; bend; berries; best; bice; black; blew; body; bright; colour; coloured; colouring; copper; darkest; directions; doe; draft; draw; drawing; dry; end; equall; eye; face; faire; feet; figure; fine; fore; garments; gold; good; green; ground; gum; hand; hard; head; indico; inke; ioynts; iust; lake; lead; light; like; line; little; making; man; mans; masticote; measures; mouth; nature; nose; observed; oker; paper; parts; pen; perpendicular; picture; place; proportion; red; rule; sap; seene; set; shadow; shadowed; sheet; small; spanish; stand; strait; stroake; temper; text; thick; thing; turne; umber; use; verditer; vvith; washing; water; way; white; work; yellow cache: A28779.xml plain text: A28779.txt item: #3 of 5 id: A43083 author: Haudicquer de Blancourt, Jean, b. ca. 1650. title: The art of glass shewing how to make all sorts of glass, crystal and enamel : likewise the making of pearls, precious stones, china and looking-glasses : to which is added, the method of painting on glass and enameling : also how to extract the colours from minerals, metals, herbs and flowers ... : illustrated with proper sculptures / written originally in French, by Mr. H. Blancourt, and now first translated into English ; with an appendix, containing exact instructions for making glass-eyes of all colours. date: 1699 words: 84512 flesch: 71 summary: If any of this Glass be cast into a Furnace , you may see what a vast number of Colours it is susceptible of , even beyond Comparison . The Name of Glass , which the French , Germans , and English have given it , seems to be taken from its resembling or approaching somewhat in its Colour to † Azure , or Sky-colour . keywords: admirable; aes; allom; aqua; armoniac; art; artificial; ashes; authors; bake; beauty; best; better; black; blood; blue; body; boil; book; brass; break; calcination; calcined; calx; carbuncle; care; cement; certain; chalcedony; chap; chapter; china; clear; close; coals; cold; colour; colour enamel; colour glass; common; composition; convenient; cool; copper; cover; crocus; crucible; crystal; cucurbit; curious; cut; days; decant; deeper; degrees; design; diamonds; different; drams; draw; dry; earthen; easie; effects; emerald; employ; enamel; enameling; end; english; equal; excellent; experience; extraordinary; fair; fairer; fear; ferretto; filings; fine; fine colour; fine powder; fire; fit; flame; flowers; following; form; fortis; fourth; fresh; fritt; furnace; fusion; gems; gentle; glass; glass body; glasses; glazed; glorificatus; god; gold; goldsmiths; good; grains; granat; great; great glass; greater; green; grind; ground; half; hands; hard; hardness; head; heat; heated; hole; hot; hours; house; ibid; impalpable; inches; ingredients; iron; lake; lapis; large; lay; lazuli; lead; learned; leave; like; linseed; little; lixivium; long; longer; looking; lustre; lute; making; manganese; manner; marble; marine; martis; mass; materials; matras; matter; means; mercury; metal; method; middle; milk; minium; mirrours; mix; mixed; mixing; mixt; mortar; mouth; natural; nature; necessary; new; noble; notice; occasion; opening; operations; order; oriental; ounces; oyl; painting; parts; paste; pearl; perfect; perfection; persons; philosophers; pieces; piedmont; place; plates; polish; polished; pot; pound; pour; powder; precedent; precious; preparation; prepared; prescribed; principal; process; proper; pulverized; pure; purified; purple; purpose; quality; quantity; reader; reason; receiver; red colour; regalis; remains; rest; reverberatory; rise; rocaille; rochetta; rose; ruby; run; said; salt; sand; sapphire; saturn; saturnus; scales; sea; searce; second; secret; self; separate; set; shearings; shewn; shining; sieve; silver; sky; small; sorts; space; spain; spirit; steel; stick; stirring; stones; strong; stuff; subject; sufficient; sulphur; sun; tartar; text; thereon; thick; things; tho; thrice; time; tincture; tinged; tinging; topaz; transparent; true; use; uses; ustum; venus; verdigrease; vessel; vinegar; violet; vitriol; vltra; ware; warm; wash; water; way; ways; weight; wheel; whereof; white; wood; work; working; workman; world; yellow; zaffer; ● ● cache: A43083.xml plain text: A43083.txt item: #4 of 5 id: A78282 author: Gutteridge, William, fl. 1680. title: The case of William Gutteridge, and other glass-makers, against passing a pattent for incorporating Sir Joseph Herne, and others, by the name of the glass-makers in the cities of London and Westminster, and ten miles compass of the same date: 1680 words: 1673 flesch: 64 summary: They suggest , That by their continued Pains , Industry , long Experience in the Trade of making of Glass , and at their great Cost and Charges , they have attained to greater Knowledge in the said Manufacture than any others , and make better Glass than any heretofore made , and some never before made . There were indeed some years since , great Quantities Imported , but now there is little or none , because the Petitioner make better and cheaper Glass , than any heretofore Imported , and do daily Export great Quantities of Glass , and could do more , were there a Market for the same ; and many of the Petitioner Glass-Houses now stand unimployed , there being more Glass by them than they can sell . keywords: artists; books; characters; corporation; early; eebo; english; glass; great; london; makers; manufacture; miles; quantities; respons; said; tcp; tei; text; westminster; william; works cache: A78282.xml plain text: A78282.txt item: #5 of 5 id: A89497 author: Mansell, Robert, Sir, 1568 or 9-1656. title: The true state of the businesse of glasse of all kindes, as it now standeth both in the price of glasse and materialls, how sold these fifteen yeers last past, and how formerly, the price of materialls as they are now bought, and what hath been formerly paid, with a report of the condition of all kindes of glasses. date: 1641 words: 1445 flesch: 74 summary: 2007-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2007-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2007-09 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2007-09 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion The true State of the businesse of Glasse of all kindes , as it now standeth both in the price of Glasse and Materialls , how sold these fifteen yeers last past , and how formerly , The price of Materialls as they are now bought , and what hath been formerly paid , with a report of the condition of all kinds of Glasses . Looking-Glasses and Spectacle — Glasse Plates are likewise made by me here in England , being undertaken and perfected by me with great charge and hazzard , and the expence of twenty yeers time , which work I did the rather undergo in that I understood , the State of Venice had restrained the transportation of that Commoditie rough and unpollished upon pain of confiscation , and other heavy punishments , in respect the grinding , graving , pollishing , and foyling thereof doth imploy great numbers of poor people , and afford them maintenance , which benefit doth hereby redound to the Natives of this Kingdome . keywords: a89497; businesse; cristall; dozen; english; feet; glasse; great; kindes; kingdome; materialls; past; price; state; text; thomason; true; yeers cache: A89497.xml plain text: A89497.txt