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Free Books / Crafts / Cyclopaedia Of Mechanics / | ![]() |
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Recipes For White Ink |
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This section is from the book "Cassell's Cyclopaedia Of Mechanics", by Paul N. Hasluck. Also available from Amazon: Cassell's Cyclopaedia Of Mechanics.
The following are recipes for white inks. White egg-shells are powdered in a mortar with clean water, and the powder is dried. Dissolve 1 part of white gum ammoniac in3 parts of acetic acid; a gentle heat will aid this. Strain through muslin, and add 1 part of powdered egg-shell. To thin the ink, dilute with acetic acid. Write with a quill pen or sable brush. Pure whiting or Chinese white may be substituted for the egg-shell. Another and simpler recipe is to mix with a weak solution of arabic gum any one of the following. Flake white, French zinc white, white-lead, freshly precipitated barium sulphate, starch, or magnesium carbonate. The white substance must be reduced to an impalpable powder before mixing.
 
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