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Egg Tempera is a painting medium and method, but painters sometimes have
to put calligraphy and calligraphic ornaments in their pictures. If the
painter uses exclusively acrylic paints, he can easily create fine lines
for calligraphic work, even white lines against black, by watering down
his paint. Even acrylics in tubes the consistency of tooth paste can be
made to flow in a nib pen, while still thick enough to give an opaque
line. Egg tempera gives the oil painter a way of making incredibly fine
details, such as required for intricate lettering.
The most direct way to use egg tempera is to add water to egg yolk, about
1 part water and one part yolk, or more water as it pleases you. You then
mix this with your pigment. The purists insist that you buy pure powdered
pigments, mix them with water to form a thick paste, and then grind them
on a piece of glass with a glass muller to break down aggregate particles.
You then can use this paste with your egg yolk and water medium. Otherwise,
you can use gouache, since it is very high in pigment, or watercolours
from tubes. The professional egg tempera painters I consulted discourage
(without adequate explanation) the use of watercolours. Some forums I
consulted suggest that the gum arabic in water colours does not go well
with the egg. I rather doubt this, since ancient painting manuals, such
as Cennini, mention that painters would add the juice of figs and other
vegetable materials to egg and these would actually improve the quality.
Egg tempera has a reputation for going bad very quickly, but you can counter
this by adding a few drops of vinegar (or oil of clove, but I have no
idea where to get this) to your medium.
Now, my next suggestion, which I have tried, will seem heterodox to the
purists (my comments were not posted in a forum, which leads me to this
opinion). I consulted with someone who runs a store in household paints.
When you buy a can of paint, the store draws from vats of dye and adds
these to the paint. What, I asked, is the composition of the dye. The
dye for housepaint consists of pure pigment and glycerine. The dye can
be added to either oil paint or water based latex paint. Such is the nature
of glycerine. I purchased some of these dyes at 1.00 per squirt, which
I stored in baby-food bottles. I did a few paintings which pleased me
somewhat, although it seemed that the glycerine would come to the top
of the painting and take a while to disappear. I then put some of these
dyes in a muffin tray and added water. When the water evaporated, some
of the glycerine was taken with the water, and I was left with a very
thick paste in each tray. Now this paste was and is excellent.
An additional note on these hardware store colours. The law requires that
non-toxic chemicals must be used in such paint. On the other hand, if
you grind your own pigments, you might be working with dust of cadmium
and lead. You have to be very careful. Also, at least some brands of paint
dye use only permanent colours. Also, in some cases you can even be sure
what the colours really are - you can buy tubes of dye at least for raw
sienna, burnt sienna, yellow ochre and others.
Using egg tempera can be more like drawing than painting (if you want).
Every line you lay down with your brush sets almost instantly, allowing
you to cross-hatch as if you were drawing with a pencil. The most important
consideration to the painter and calligrapher, is that egg tempera can
be used in conjunction with oils, in three ways. First, you can do a clear
concise painting in egg tempera and then paint over it in oil in order
to take advantage of the smooth mixing of oil paints. Second, you can
paint with egg tempera on top of dried oil. Third, you can paint with
egg tempera into wet oil. The amazing thing is that the egg tempera, although
it contains water, does not have any problem sticking to oil. This is
because egg tempera is an emulsion, where a gum allows small drops of
water to be held in suspension in water. Egg tempera on oil retains its
crisp lines, making it ideal for working careful details into an oil painting.
This was how the Dutch masters (Vermeer and others) were able to make
small details in their oil paintings. I made the remarkable discovery
that I could use egg/oil emulsion (when I used the right consistency of
oil) in a nib pen, to make very concise details, dots and lines on
top of an oil painting (!). While you are working with it, the lines
stay crisp because of the effect of water on ail, but with the evaporation
of the water, the tempera emulsion bonds perfectly with the oil underneath.
Egg/Oil Emulsions
Actually, I have worked with an egg-tempera/oil emulsion together with
oils. The recipe I have is from Brigid Marlin, who has a web-site describing
"mische technique" (mixed oil/egg-tempera technique). It is as follows.
Egg/Oil Recipe # 1
Into a clean jar, crack a fresh egg. (I strain the egg
through a small sieve, in order to strain out some of the solids). Add
an equal amount of painting medium (half linseed oil, half damar varnish)
then add water to the amount of both of these combined. Store in the refrigerator.
It will keep for a year. Always shake well before using." Since egg white
contains more water and less oil than egg-yolk, it can admit more additional
oil. It may be my imagination, but this medium seems to get better with
age, it drys more quickly now after six months. Another tip, don't dip
your brush into your egg medium, but use a medicine dropper specifically
for this purpose.
Egg/Oil
Recipe # 2
I have had success adding a small amount of linseed oil
(a capful thinned with turpentine) to an egg yolk, mixing thoroughly,
and then adding the water. I got the complete recipe from the website
of Kama Pigments in Quebec.
Despite all of her virtues, egg tempera dries very fast, doesn’t allow
much mixing of color and demands only rigid supports. This modified formula
allows flexibility by gaining some of the qualities of oil paint.
Use 1 part Egg yolk, 1 part Linseed oil, 1 part Water, 1 part White Vinegar
(or oil of cloves 10 drops). DIRECTIONS: Separate the yolk from the white
and drain in a little bowl. Drop by drop, mix the linseed oil vigorously
into the yolk to obtain a good emulsification and add the water when done.
HOW TO USE IT: Pre-mix the amount of dry pigments necessary for your session
with the binder and paint. This emulsion may be used over rigid or flexible
supports with proper application of gesso. For multiple layers, use water
as you solvent and, as you progress in coats, gradually reduce the amount
of water used in order to respect the «fat over lean» rule. This emulsion
may also be used to paint wet in wet in an fresh oil painting.
The Surface
Egg tempera is ideally used on a rigid panel prepared with traditional
gesso (rabbit skin glue, marble dust or talc or slaked plaster, and white
coloration). Egg tempera does not seem to stick well on acrylic gesso,
although you may counteract this (possibly) by painting your gessoed surface
with egg tempera and then letting it set for a long, long time. Egg tempera
and egg/oil emulsions work just fine on paper, but there may be problems
later, since when egg tempera is completely dry and set, it is brittle.
However, if you glue your masterpiece to a rigid surface before a year
passes, I don't know why you should expect problems. An amazing property
of egg/oil emulsions is that even if you paint on thin paper, the oil
does not seem to penetrate and stain the paper - the protein gum in the
egg somehow prevents this.

The above painting
is an example of the mische technique that I learned from the website
of Brigid Marlin, although I did not follow every detail of her technique.
The size of the painting on your monitor is approximately the actual size.
First, I "drew" the picture in a medium of oil paste (one could use oil
paint with a little beeswax). This sort of thing is analogous to fingerpainting,
and you can redo your sketches as long as the medium remains pliable.
Second, when it was dried I glazed it with red paint diluted in oil. When
this was dry, I put in the highlights in white egg tempera. I repeated
the process with yellow, then white highlights again, and blue, with a
few highlights.
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