Modelling of draperies
Artists' Techniques
Draperies of different colours were modelled in different ways. Dark blue, orange and dark pink fabrics were painted in uniform hues, with folds defined by black lines, and decorative motifs painted in thin white lines. This gives them a rather ‘flat’ appearance compared with the light pink and light blue robes, which were modelled with gradations of colour to create the illusion of volume. On fol. 3r, the modelling is more three-dimensional and dynamic, but the gradation of colour is less delicate than on other folios.
Annunciation with John de Pabenham and Joan Clifford kneeling in the lower margin (Hours of the Virgin)
Underdrawing for the draperies is visible in the infrared image, as well as through the semi-transparent paint used in the Virgin’s pink mantle. This garment was painted with a mixture of an insect-based red dye, lead white and gypsum (hotspot 1), while Gabriel’s dark pink tunic contains a red dye mixed with chalk (hotspot 2). Gabriel’s blue-grey wings contain azurite blue and small quantities of an organic red, as can be seen under magnification (hotspot 4). The tooled gold leaf in the background was additionally decorated by painting a pattern of spirals with an arsenic sulphide yellow pigment, likely orpiment (hotspot 5).