Bone Glue Pearls
High-grade bone glue imported from Italy made of pure bovine and porcine bone. Bone glue pearls are easy to dissolve in water. Bone glue is a harder and less flexible than hide or rabbit skin glue, and stronger than technical gelatin.
This is a high-grade glue made in Italy of pure bovine and porcine bones. It is a granular glue that is easy to dissolve in water. This makes it ideal for woodworking, chalk, and gesso grounds and as a medium for distemper painting.
Stronger than most modern adhesives, bone glue is used in traditional woodworking, gilding, and painting techniques. First soaked in water and then heated in a water bath, it is applied warm, and gels when left to cool. In woodworking, bone glue's solubility in water makes it reversible, while its "open time" allows for repositioning. In painting and gilding techniques, it is used as a size for canvas and boards, in recipes to make traditional chalk and gesso grounds, and in distemper paints.
Animal glues vary in strength, but bone glue usually offers increased hardness over hide glues and longer open time.
Origin and History
Animal glues have been in use since ancient times. Paintings and murals between 1500–1000 BCE show details of wood gluing operations. A casket removed from the tomb of King Tut shows the use of glue in its construction. Many art objects and furnishings from the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs are bonded or laminated with some animal glue. The first references in the literature concerning glue providing simple procedures for making and using animal glue were written about 200 BCE.
Much of the original development of adhesives based on natural products have come in the woodworking and paper industries. Before World War I, there were simply no other options. The five classes of adhesives used most were animal glues, liquid glues (lower strength variety of fish or animal glue stabilized with acid for long-term storage), casein and vegetable protein glues, starch glues, and blood albumin glues. Also used less in adhesive formulations at the time were sodium silicate, mucilage, asphalts, gums, shellacs, and natural rubber.
Source
Animal glues are adhesives that are high molecular weight polymers in organic colloid form from hydrolyzed collagen found in animal hides, connective tissues, and bones. Glue contains two groups of proteins: chondrin, which accounts for its adhesive strength, and gluten, which contributes to jelling strength. Animal glue is derived from the simple hydrolysis of collagen, the principal protein constituent of animal hide, connective tissue, and bones.
Hide, and bone glues comprise the two major animal glue types. Bone glue yields a reasonably neutral pH in a solution, usually 6.5 to 7.4, although wider variations are possible. Bone glue is generally acidic, having pH values of 5.8 to 6.3. Glue with high acidity absorbs less water and tends to set more slowly than glue with low acidity.
Uses of Bone Glue
Always make the minimum concentration required; as a guide, a set jelly should be somewhere between a firm gel and jelly. Try 50 grams of rabbit skin glue for every liter of water for a canvas or panel size. For distemper paints, 100 grams for every liter. As an adhesive, check the consistency by dipping a piece of wood into the glue pot. If the glue runs off smoothly, you've got it right. If it is too thick, add a little water. Use the glue hot.
Animal glue is soluble only in water and insoluble in oils, greases, alcohols, and other organic solvents. When placed in cold water, the glue absorbs water and swells to form a gel. When heated, the glue dissolves to form a solution. When the solution is cooled, the glue forms an elastic gel once again. This property is thermally reversible, and upon application of heat, the gel liquefies. The gelling or melting point of an animal glue solution can vary from below room temperature to over 120 ºF, depending upon the grade, concentration, and presence of modifiers in the glue.
Alteration of Animal Glue
Collagen glue can be modified with a wide variety of additives. Adding 1% by weight of alum (aluminum sulfate) or formaldehyde effectively makes it more waterproof. Potassium chloride and potash prevent brittleness and crazing. An addition of 5% glycerin increases the flexibility of the glue. Adding 5-10% or more by weight of urea extends the gel time and increases flexibility. Adding more than 15% of urea to the dry weight of the glue produces liquid glue at room temperature.
Specifications
Bloom: 200–220 grams
The bloom measurement refers to the elasticity of a gelatinous mass. The higher the number, the greater the elasticity.
Viscosity: 80–110 millipascal seconds
The millipascal seconds is a viscosity measurement by the flow velocity of the glue solution through a funnel.
Glue Size Recipe
Ingredients
50 grams of bone glue (dry)
1 liter water
5 grams alum (optional)
- Prepare glue solution by soaking 50 grams of glue in 800 ml water for approximately 2 hours. You can also leave it overnight.
- Add 5 grams of alum to 200 ml of water and let it dissolve. Add the alum solution to the warm glue before applying it to the panel or canvas. The alum will make the sizing water-resistant and form a jelly-like consistency once the glue has had time to cool down.
- Using a spatula, apply the glue as a jelly in a single, thin layer.
- Let the size dry for approximately 24 hours.
Distemper Paint Recipe
Hide glue, bone glue, and gelatin provide a low-cost, easily formulated distemper paint. Diluted with water, it is suitable for color sketching and painting. Distemper paintings have lasted for centuries without change.
Ingredients
1 part animal glue (dry)
Ten parts water
How to Use
Work the dry pigments with water into a heavy paste with a palette knife. Then grind the pigment into the warm solution of glue. Keep the paints warm enough to remain in the solution while painting with them, and use warm water to dilute them. Use a bristle brush for painting, applying the paint in thin layers to glue-sized paper, cardboard, panel, or canvas. This method is excellent for alla prima painting and thin underpainting. To harden and preserve the paint film, spray the dried painting with a 10% solution of water and alum.
- Leave the glue in water overnight or for a full day.
- Let the glue absorb as much water as possible, then pour off the excess water.
- Warm this swollen glue in a double boiler or glue pot. This will cause it to melt. All animal glues should never be heated over 150 ºF.
Specifications | |
Source: | Bovine and porcine bones |
Chemical Name: | Hydrolyzed collagen |
Chemical Formula: | C102H151O39N31 |
Analysis | |
Viscosity, 17.7% solution: | 6.16 (See Note 1) |
Jelly Strength, Bloom Gram: | 200–220 |
pH: | 6.2 |
Water: | 10.0% |
Fat: | 0.2% |
Ash: | 1.2% |
Foaming: | – |
Specific gravity: | 1.27 @ 25 ºC |
Note 1: The viscosity measurement of 17.7% percent solution at 20 ºC. In Great Britain, a scale was used as a conventional measure of kinematic viscosity. The Engler scale is based on comparing the flow of the substance being tested to the flow of another substance, namely water. Viscosity in Engler degrees is the ratio of the time of flow of 200 cubic centimeters of the material whose viscosity is being measured to the time of flow of 200 cubic centimeters of water at the same temperature (usually 20 ºC but sometimes 50 ºC or 100 ºC) in a standardized Engler viscosity meter.
SKU | 510-21BGL |
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Brand | Rublev Colours |
Vendor | Natural Pigments |
Processing Time | Orders ship on Tuesdays and Thursdays. |