i dont know very much about period embeishmen on horns, how common was the use of color? what colors where used? was it regional? just something i havent seen very often and i like my stuff to be a little different, and this piqued my interest, thanks in advance for any info, Zack
Zack,
If you are talking about the addition of colors to different details of scrimshaw work, it is called polychrome. If you look at old original horns you will sometimes see different details colored in with red, blue, yellow or green. I wouldn't say it was common, but there are enough original horns with the coloring to know that it was done. One place you see it a lot is on Tansel family made horns and I think especially on horns made by Timothy Tansel. Originally the dyes used to color the scrimshaw details were made using nitric acid and various metals and coloring agents.
If you go to the thread started by Larry Pletcher about the horn making class at Conner Prairie you can see a picture of a Tansel powder horn made by Art De Camp with yellow dye used to color some of the scrimshaw details.
http://americanlongrifles.org/forum/index.php?topic=1521.0If you go to my website you can see the primary horn that I made the priming horn to mate with. It is the first horn pictured on my powder horn page.
www.harddogrifles.comI am not an expert on coloring horns like this, but maybe Art De Camp or Shelby Gallien will see this and have more information, ideas or thoughts on the matter. Maybe Larry Pletcher picked up some information on polychrome dyeing of horns at Conner Prairie??
Randy Hedden
www.harddogrifles.com