(5 hours ago)quimqu Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I am sorry but I don't agree. If you compare You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. and You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. you can see that in You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view. the water in the pool covers almost all the stitching.
Too bad that we don't have multi-spectral images of those pages. They were taken with slanted light, so they would have shown the actual relief in that area. Hopefully someone can check the actual book someday.
Until then, I am quite sure that the stitches were removed already by the vellum maker. I suppose that he then pounced the "lips" as flat as he could, stuck the two edges of the tear with hide glue, and plastered the defect over with the paste (presumably glue and chalk) that he generally used to smooth defects. Much of that plaster would have fallen off by now, but the dark tan blobs like (A,B) on the clip of You are not allowed to view links.
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In spite of the plaster, that area of the vellum would still be too rough for fine drawing or writing, so the original Scribe mostly avoided it. As I see it, his original figure did not have the big green pool and its wavy outline. He may have intruded in that area only with the belly and thigh of Miss Okal, using the stitch hole as her belly button (a kind of gag that he used elsewhere). But the Retracer may have done that instead; I can't tell.
[By the way, I noticed only now that the nymphs have belly buttons! There goes my theory that they were supernatural fairies spontaneously generated from the green and blue broths of that magical water palace...]
That rough area around the tear was invaded by both the Retracer who (I believe) added the wavy big pool outline, and the Painter who filled it. See (M) and (N), respectively. Thus, unfortunately, those details cannot be used to decide which of them came first.
The thread definitely was not there when the paint was applied. Note that there is a broad paint stroke (E) that runs straight over one of the stitching holes (F), across the whole pond. Moreover, if the thread was still there, the greenpaint would have collected under it and left a "shadow" of the stitching.
On the other side You are not allowed to view links.
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However, at (H,I) it seems that the green paint partially washed away and/or obscured the big pool outline. At (H), it even seems that the washed-off ink of the outline then collected at the edge of the green paint. Thus, again, I beleive tha the Painter did his job after the Retracer.
All the best, --jorge