gold leaf
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]- Gold beaten into a thin sheet.
- 1697, Remarks Upon a Scurrilous Libel[1]:
- But this Cobweb Lawn is too thin; a gold Leaf to cover the forgoing poison: For nothing is more plain, that he means, that the King is the Head Conspirator in all this slavery […]
- 1712, The miscellaneous works of Oliver Goldsmith[2], volume 4, page 11:
- The streets of Nankin are sometimes strewed with gold leaf; very different are those of London: in the midst of their pavements, a great lazy puddle moves muddily along […]
- 1860 January 7, The Chemical News[3], page 55:
- I cannot take a better illustration of this than that of gold leaf, because it brings before us the reason of this apparent difference in the time of the fall.
- 1956, Daniel Varney Thompson, The Materials and Techniques of Medieval Painting[4]:
- After the gesso was quite smooth and even it was covered with thin layers of tempered bole, to form a colour ground under the gold leaf, and to provide a sleek, lustrous cushion for the under side of the gold to rest on while the burnisher was pressing on the top.
- 2001, Milton Ohring, Materials Science of Thin Films[5], page xix:
- Today, gold leaf can be machine-beaten to 0.1 micron and to 0.05 micron when beaten by a skilled craftsman.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]gold beaten into a thin sheet
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