Abstract
In the previous paper (Part I), the colorimetry and interferometric microscopy measurements on modern gold leaf models have revealed that the visual appearance of a gilded surface, both burnished and unburnished, depends strongly on the substrate type, surface roughness and texture, but not on the colour of the substrate. In this second part, we investigate the materials compositions and technical specifications of medieval gold leaf through combining literature sources and materials analysis such as scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM–EDX) on samples taken from gilded wooden sculptures. Our study shows that the late medieval gold leaf has a high purity of about 23.7 carat and has an average thickness of 160 nm (with a peak value of 138 nm), purer and thicker than the modern gold leaves studies in Part I. Supportive Rutherford backscattering spectrometry (RBS) measurements on gilded models confirms the accuracy and reliability of the SEM–EDX observations on the medieval gold leaf samples. We additionally present observations of a rarely recorded special variant of medieval gold leaf—“fine reinforced gold leaf”. Combined with the findings from Part I, we conclude that light penetrating the medieval gold leaf and reflected from the gilding substrate could not be a significant, or even perceptible contribution to the visual appearance of the gilding. We argue that the misconception surrounding the correlation between the substrate colour and the gilded surface appearance can be attributed to the historical development of gilding and polychromy technologies.
Highlights
In the history of medieval gilding, a popular point of view states that the colour of the gilding substrate influences the visual perception of the gilded surface due to the ultra-thin gold leaf being not completely opaque [1,2,3,4]
Surface burnishing is the most critical factor in determining the colour appearance of a gold leaf through changing the roughness of its surface and the proportion of the specular and diffuse light reflections; and the quality of a surface burnishing is strongly dependent on the mechanical support provided by the substrate materials
Our investigations combining literature sources and SEM–EDX measurements on samples taken from gilded artefacts show that the medieval gold leaf is of high gold purity of about 23.7 carat and around 160 nm thick, which is only about 1.4–1.7 times as thick as modern gold leaves, indicating a high technological level in the manufacturing of fine gilding materials in the late medieval period
Summary
In the history of medieval gilding, a popular point of view states that the colour of the gilding substrate influences the visual perception of the gilded surface due to the ultra-thin gold leaf being not completely opaque [1,2,3,4]. The current paper (Part II) focuses on investigating two technological parameters of medieval gold leaf, namely the gold purity and leaf thickness, which are critical factors for the colour perception of a gold leaf and important to determine whether the findings from Part I apply to the domain of medieval gold leaf Information regarding these parameters is obtained through literature study in medieval gilding and materials analysis such as scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM–EDX) on samples taken from medieval gilded artefacts. The comparison between RBS and SEM investigations on modern gold leaf aims to verify the precision of the sample preparation and experimental methods
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