@raisin212k Yes, it does change the writing surface. Depending on how deep I scratch and how I hold the knife, it can actually make the surface smoother. Sometimes it's necessary to treat the vellum (it's calfskin vellum, not paper) by sanding it and rubbing pumice on it after scraping off a mistake. You can see this in lots of surviving medieval manuscripts - you can tell that a mistake has been scraped off, and the writing surface holds the ink differently than the surrounding areas.
wouldn't this make the surface rougher and change the way the ink is absorbed on the paper?
raisin212k 3 days ago
@raisin212k Yes, it does change the writing surface. Depending on how deep I scratch and how I hold the knife, it can actually make the surface smoother. Sometimes it's necessary to treat the vellum (it's calfskin vellum, not paper) by sanding it and rubbing pumice on it after scraping off a mistake. You can see this in lots of surviving medieval manuscripts - you can tell that a mistake has been scraped off, and the writing surface holds the ink differently than the surrounding areas.
BygoneArts 3 days ago
@BygoneArts Oh, this makes sense. I didn't realize it was vellum. I have yet to work with it. Very useful info, thanks for the reply!
raisin212k 3 days ago
Is this a case where the "sword" is mightier than the pen?
rmcdaniel423 1 year ago 7
@rmcdaniel423 Hahahahahahahahaha :o)
idaspe 1 year ago