Pre-1875 Paints
Production and Appearance. How were paints made prior to the widespread
use of factory-made paint after 1875? How did they look? The answers to these
questions are provided more to underscore the differences between early
paints and today's paints than for practical purposes. Duplicating the composition
and appearance of historic paints, including the unevenness of color, the
irregularity of surface texture, the depth provided by a glaze top coat,
and the directional lines of application, can be extremely challenging to
a contemporary painter who is using modern materials.
The Boston Stone (1737), a surviving relic of early paint production, was used for pigment grinding in the shop of Thomas Child of Boston, a London-trained painter and stainer. Photo: Courtesy, SPNEA.
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The pigments used in early paints were coarsely and unevenly ground,
and they were dispersed in the paint medium by hand; thus, there is a subtle
unevenness of color across the surface of many pre-1875 paints. The dry pigments had to be ground in oil to form a paste and the paste
had to be successively thinned with more oil and turpentine before the paint
was ready for application. The thickness of the oil medium produced the
shiny surface desired in the 18th century. In combination with the cylindrical
(or round) shaped brushes with wood handles and boar bristles, it also produced
a paint film with a surface texture of brush strokes.
Geographical Variation. The early churches and missions built by the
French in Canada and the Spanish in the southwestern United States often
had painted decoration on whitewashed plaster walls, done with early waterbased
paints. By the mid-17th century oil paint was applied to wood trim in many
New England houses, and whitewash was applied to walls. These two types
of paint, one capable of highly decorative effects such as imitating marble
or expensive wood and the other cheap to make and relatively easy to apply,
brightened and enhanced American interiors. In cities such as Boston, Philadelphia,
New York, and later, Washington, painters and stainers who were trained
guildsmen from England practiced their craft and instructed apprentices.
The painter's palette of colors included black and white and grays, buffs
and tans, ochre yellows and iron oxide reds, and greens (from copper compounds)
as well as Prussian blue. That such painting was valued and that a glossy
appearance on wood was important are substantiated by evidence of clear
and tinted glazes which may be found by microscopic examination.
Brush Marks. Early paints did not dry out to a flat level surface. Leveling,
in fact, was a property of paint that was much sought after later, but until
well into the 19th century, oil paints and whitewashes showed the signs
of brush marks. Application therefore was a matter of stroking the brush
in the right direction for the best appearance. The rule of thumb was to
draw the brush in its final stokes in the direction of the grain of the
wood. Raisedfield paneling, then, required that the painter first cover
the surface with paint and afterward draw the brush carefully along the
vertical areas from bottom to top and along the top and bottom bevels of
the panel horizontally from one side
to the other.