Short burin used by Samuel Palmer.
Burin
third quarter 19th century (made)
third quarter 19th century (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Typically engravers use burins with a diamond or lozenge shaped profile to incise their designs into metal. The action of engraving with a burin creates a tapered line, which swells in the middle. The shavings of metal that are brought up are scraped or burnished off before printing. This burin was used by the artists Samuel Palmer (1805–1881), Martin Hardie (1875–1952) and Robert Austin (1895–1973) in succession.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Short burin used by Samuel Palmer. (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Wood, metal alloy and steel. |
Brief description | Possibly made by Donaldson. Short burin used by Samuel Palmer, third quarter 19th century |
Physical description | Etching tool with four sided blade encased in long wooden handle with metal decoration. |
Credit line | Presented by Miss Dorothea Short |
Object history | In 1850, at the age of forty-five, Samuel Palmer took up etching. The artist's son, A. H. Palmer, gave the tools to three people: Sir Frank Short, Martin Hardie, and F.L. Griggs. Hardie and Short each donated two of Palmer's etching tools to the V&A museum. In a note sent to Martin Hardie in 1923 A. H. Palmer recalled that the tools with 'German silver fittings were made by one Donaldson, in industrious, between bibulous, intervals - a noted man at his craft'. |
Summary | Typically engravers use burins with a diamond or lozenge shaped profile to incise their designs into metal. The action of engraving with a burin creates a tapered line, which swells in the middle. The shavings of metal that are brought up are scraped or burnished off before printing. This burin was used by the artists Samuel Palmer (1805–1881), Martin Hardie (1875–1952) and Robert Austin (1895–1973) in succession. |
Associated objects |
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Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | E.460-1953 |
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Record created | August 3, 2006 |
Record URL |
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