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What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - Printable Version +- The Voynich Ninja (https://www.voynich.ninja) +-- Forum: Voynich Research (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-27.html) +--- Forum: Physical material (https://www.voynich.ninja/forum-42.html) +--- Thread: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? (/thread-4955.html) |
RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - Jorge_Stolfi - 29-09-2025 (29-09-2025, 09:20 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The point about the Marci annotations is that they have NO iron AT ALL. Only zinc and a few other trace elements. Ak, OK. In other words, it is not iron-gall ink (IGI). Probably India (China, lampblack) ink or the like. Iron-gall ink makes sense in only two situations:
Even for writing on vellum or parchment, there would be no point in using IGI for temporary annotations -- like quire numbers to guide the book-binder, or a tentative letter substitution table on the margin of a presumed cipher book. In fact, if the annotation was meant to be erased later, it had better not be in IGI. Marci's secretary presumably had IGI at hand at all times, to write permanent stuff on vellum. Marci himself may have written only on paper, and then he would have no reason to make and keep IGI. By the way, AFAIK labs like McCrone have no way to positively identify iron-gall ink. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) only reveals the metallic elements present in the sample, not their chemical state. X-ray diffraction can identify crystalline minerals like azurite or rutile. But IGI is not crystalline, and other than iron it does not contain anything distinctive. (Tannin, the component from galls, is used in tanning the vellum; so, even if it could be detected, that would not mean anything.) So I suppose that those labs "identify" IGI only by exclusion: If there are "modern" pigments like rutile or prussian blue, it is a forgery; else If there are known crystalline minerals like azurite, it is "paint from the period"; else If there is iron, it must be iron-gall ink; else If there is no iron, then... duh... it must be "iron-free iron-gall ink". The honest thing to say would be "it is unidentified dark ink that contains iron" or "it is unidentified dark ink that does not contain iron". But that would not look good on the report, would it? All the best, --jorge RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - ReneZ - 30-09-2025 (29-09-2025, 04:19 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.There is no question that the order of application was pigment, upper-margin stain, foliation. The green is offset from the damp of the stain, and the foliation wasn't damaged by the stain elsewhere. I haven't looked at f.42 under a scope, but I would be extremely surprised if the green was on top of the folio number. This was looked at under a microscope during the Folger workshop. I had a look myself, and both the conservator and I could see that the paint was on top of the ink. Now this is unexpected for several reasons, but on the other hand, it probably could not be otherwise. The paint lies on top of the parchment while the ink goes inside (mostly). So the question remains: even if the ink of the folio number were applied later than the paint (which is what one would really expect), would the result look like this, because the ink penetrated the parchment? I cannot answer that, but it looks like something that can still be addressed and resolved using the right expertise. One specific detail is that this paint included small crystals which were obviously on top of everything else. A second question is: would it be logical/expected for someone to write the folio number over an area where paint was applied? Would the number not have been written more to the left? This is subjective and may not be possible to resolve. RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - ReneZ - 30-09-2025 With respect to the water damage and its effect on the ink, I know that this is part of on-going work, so I am not trying to get to the bottom of it here. Just my small input to this question: My knowledge about this is from reading things online, so I am very much aware how limited that knowledge is. This basic knowledge says that iron gall ink is relatively light in colour, but the dark colour we see after its application is the result of a chemical process also involving the parchment. That made me wonder how long after applying the ink, plain water would still be able to affect it. Is there a cut-off limit? Could this be even as short as 5 years (arbitrary number)? So I asked someone who knows more about this. The surprising (to me) answer is that it mainly depends on whether the ink had any surplus iron. This could be on the surface for a long time, and even very old ink could show blurring from water damage. There may well be reports about this that would be relevant for this whole question. RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - LisaFaginDavis - 30-09-2025 I'll be with the manuscript on Oct. 10 and will take a close look at f. 42r. (I'll also image the Marci-letter wax inside the front cover) RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - Jorge_Stolfi - 30-09-2025 (30-09-2025, 12:10 AM)ReneZ Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.[The f42 folio number] was looked at under a microscope during the Folger workshop. I had a look myself, and both the conservator and I could see that the paint was on top of the ink. Another interesting case is f102v1 and f103r. There is a big orange stain near the top right corner of the latter, that ofsetted on f102v1. After profound analysis of the images, I concluded that the offending substance was ketchup. OK, OK, I mean, some reddish sauce that had small bits of a very thin dark red membrane. Probably a goulash-like sauce with bits of bell pepper skin. On f103r, the stain fell over the text; and the sauce (or, more likely, the mopping up of it) severely effaced the text. (Incidentally, the state of that area is one of the best pieces of evidence for the Retracing Hypothesis. And for the claim that the Retracer could not read the text and had no access to the Author) On f102v1, the stain fell mostly on the figures of two plants. There, it had a similar erasing effect not only on the outlines of the plants, but also on the painted areas (a green leaf from the plant on the left, and one of two blue ... duh ... leaves of the plant at right. Thus I think that we can confidently say that the ketchup goulash spill happened after the painting. However, I see no trace of offsetting of the paint from f102v1 onto f103r, even though the paint was obviously softened by the sauce. Maybe my pareidolia is not that good after all. Or maybe any paint that did offset onto You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. was promptly wiped off together with the sauce. All the best, --jorge RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - Jorge_Stolfi - 30-09-2025 Moved by the recent discussion, I went through all transitions between successive quires of the VMS looking for instances of "offsetting": paint or ink from one page that got transferred by contact to the facing page, that is, the page that is in contact with it when then book is closed and all fold-outs are folded in. In summary, there are clear instances of offsetting in almost all such quire transitions that still exist. However, they are not cases where the Painter closed the book or stacked quires with the paint still wet. In all cases the transfer clearly occurred some time after painting. In one case, water seeping between the pages softened some red paint, which then stuck to the facing page. In all other cases, there was no transfer of pigment. Rather, some component of the paint somehow transferred to the facing page. The most common type of offsetting is due to a certain dark blue-gray paint. The offsetted image is a light gray stain with sharp edges, but only along the edges of the painted source area, not in the interior. In one case, that smudge includes some dark particles. That blue-gray paint seems to be a mixture of some dark ingredient, which causes the stain, and a lighter and more vivid blue paint, which never stains. Maybe the grey component was deliquescent, or food for mold? A few other cases of offsetting are caused by other paints (red and vivid green). In these cases, the offsetted image is a very very light tan stain with fuzzy edges. In one case, the same blue-gray paint created two offsetted images, separated by ~8 mm. In another case, there the offsetted images are rotated relative to their expected position by about 30 degrees. The colors must have been applied when the manuscript was unbound -- a pile of bifolios -- since there are several examples where the painting extends into the binding gutter. Or beyond it, as in the well-known case of You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. and f81r. On the other hand, Rene reports that microscopic examination of f42 shows that at least some of the green paint was applied after the folio numbers were written. Hence after the bifolios were incorrectly folded and nested, including You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. and f81r. So, here is my guess for how the VMS we see today was created: 1. The Scribe(s) wrote the text on the parchment, and drew the outlines of the illustrations in the same ink with the same quills. The bifolios already had the future folds and were grouped into quires, but are still unbound. Each section was scribed in one or more episodes separated in time, possibly by several years. Cosmo and Zodiac were scribed in that order, before Bio. Pharma was scribed before Herbal. Otherwise the order of scribing of the sections is uncertain. 2. Decades later, the book, still a collection of unbound bifolios, was in possession of another owner, who could not read it and could not consult the Author. This person defined the ordering and nesting of the bifolios and the order of the quires, and wrote the folio numbers accordingly. At this point the incorrect shuffling and ordering of pages became crystallized. But he still kept the bifolios unbound. 3. The figures were painted. The Painter was careful to let the paint dry thoroughly before re-folding and re-stacking the folios. 4. The book, still unbound, was kept for a long time in a damp place. During this time some components of some paints migrated to the facing pages. Some quires were shifted once or twice during this time, so that the same painted area created two offset stains, or stains in "wrong" positions. 5. The book was bound, as per the written folio and quire numbers. Details:
RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - proto57 - 11-10-2025 (29-09-2025, 09:20 PM)LisaFaginDavis Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.The point about the Marci annotations is that they have NO iron AT ALL. Only zinc and a few other trace elements. It's all in my lecture...recording coming this week hopefully... Hi Lisa... where did the idea that these annotations are by Marci originate from? Is it your suggestion? Why do you think Marci wrote them? I'm watching the recording of your lecture, piece by piece when I have the chance. It is all very interesting, thanks for sharing... You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. Rich. RE: What's the evidence that the colors were added later? - tavie - 11-10-2025 (11-10-2025, 03:49 PM)proto57 Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Hi Lisa... where did the idea that these annotations are by Marci originate from? Is it your suggestion? Why do you think Marci wrote them? You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. The discussion thread for the blogpost on the forum is You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. |