. The book of photography; practical, theoretical and applied. be the touches go one on the other, oreven join, they will run together, andthe result will be w^orse than making onebig touch. This will be the more notice-able when the paint is wet. The lattershould be used as dry as possible, butmust not be too dry. In this way, each spot is taken out, one at a time, orpatches are treated as aggregations ofspots. In working out long streaks,scratches, and such like, the brush shouldbe drawn right through them from end toend, beginning in the centre and workingtowards the margins; pay
. The book of photography; practical, theoretical and applied. be the touches go one on the other, oreven join, they will run together, andthe result will be w^orse than making onebig touch. This will be the more notice-able when the paint is wet. The lattershould be used as dry as possible, butmust not be too dry. In this way, each spot is taken out, one at a time, orpatches are treated as aggregations ofspots. In working out long streaks,scratches, and such like, the brush shouldbe drawn right through them from end toend, beginning in the centre and workingtowards the margins; paying the sameattention not to run the spots together orto place the touches upon one Aery large spaces have to be dealtwith—as, for example, where a piece hasto be taken off the shoulder, if oneshoulder is too high, or a piece out of thewaist where this looks too large—it isbest first of all to lay a wash right overthe place, of nearly the right depth, onlya little lighter, and then to stipple it untilthe exact tint is obtained. Stippling is. Fig. 458.—Method of Supporting Print of course understood to mean makingsingle dots with the point of the only difference between the spottingof albumen and prints is that ofsurface. A medium in the latter case isalmost a necessity, and care must be takenthat the colour is not too wet. Do notmoisten the brush in the mouth. Special Treatment of Enlargements. Except that they admit of a broader,freer style, and that more work may beput upon them in accordance with theirsize, there is no special treatment for en-largements ; so that the same remarksapply to large and small work, althoughthe work itself must vary in fineness oftouch. They may be done in colours, asexplained in the section on ColouringPhotographs, or in monochrome, asabout to be described. In some es-tablishments, small prints are workedcomparatively little, since it is con-sidered that, as they are direct prints 328 THE BOOK OF
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