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MANUFACTURE OP PAINT. A Practical Handbook for 

 Paint Manufacturers, Merchants and Painters. By J. CRUICKSHANK 

 SMITH, B.Sc. Demy 8vo. 1901. 200pp. Sixty Illustrations and One 

 Large Diagram. Price 7s. 6d. ; India and Colonies, 8s. ; Other 

 Countries, 8s. 6d. ; strictly net. 



Contents. 



Part I., Chapters I., Preparation of Raw Material. II., Storing of Raw Material-. III., 

 Testing and Valuation of Raw Material Paint Plant and Machinery. 



Part II., Chapters V., The Grinding of White Lead. VI., Grinding of White Zinc. VII., 

 Grinding of other White Pigments. VIII., Grinding of Oxide Paints. IX., Grinding of Stain- 

 ing Colours. X., Grinding of Black Paints. XL, Grinding of Chemical Colours Yellows. 

 XII., Grinding of Chemical Colours Blues. XI 1 1., Grinding Greens. XIV., Grinding Reds. 

 XV., Grinding Lakes. XVI., Grinding Colours in Water. XVI L, Grinding Colours in 

 Turpentine. 



Part III., Chapters XVIII., The Uses of Paint. XIX., Testing and Matching Paints. 

 XX., Economic Considerations. Index. 



Press Opinions. 



"Will fill a place hitherto unoccupied; . . . bears all the marks of thoroughness both on the 

 scientific and technical side. That it will take its place as the standard book of its subject may 

 safely be predicted." Aberdeen Free Press. 



"This is a workmanlike manual of the methods and processes of an industry known to the 

 world at large only by its remote results. . . . This clearly written and well-informed hand- 

 book gives a plain exposition of these matters, and cannot but prove useful to manufacturers 

 and merchants, and to painters curious about the materials in which they work." The Scotsman. 



"Mr. Smith's book is practical throughout, and it will be found helpful to those engaged in 

 the industry and those who make use of paints." The Architect. 



" It is an important text-book for students attending technical classes in these subjects, con- 

 cisely setting forth in a most practical manner many intricate details in the preparation and 

 production of paint during the operation of grinding. . . . The work should occupy a position 

 on the bookshelf of every individual interested in paint." The Decorators' and Painters' 

 Magazine, 



THE CHEMISTRY OF PIGMENTS. By ERNEST J. PARRY, 

 B.Sc. (Lond.), F.I.C., F.C.S., and J. H. COSTE, F.I.C., F.C.S. Demy 

 8vo. Five Illustrations. 285 pp. 1902. Price 10s. 6d. ; India and 

 Colonies, 11s.; Other Countries, 12s. ; strictly net. 

 Contents. 



Chapter L, Introductory. Light White Light The Spectrum The Invisible Spectrum 

 Normal Spectrum Simple Nature of Pure Spectral Colour The Recomposition of White 

 Light Primary and Complementary Colours Coloured Bodies Absorption Spectra. Chap- 

 ter II., The Application of Pigments. Uses of Pigments : Artistic, Decorative, Protective 

 Methods of Application of Pigments : Pastels and Crayons, Water Colour, Tempera 

 Painting, Fresco, Encaustic Painting, Oil-colour Painting, Keramic Art, Enamel, Stained and 

 Painted Glass, Mosaic. Chapter III., Inorganic Pigments. White Lead Zinc White- 

 Enamel White Whitening Red Lead Litharge Vermilion Royal Scarlet The Chromium 

 Greens Chromates of Lead, Zinc, Silver and Mercury Brunswick Green -The Ochres 

 Indian Red Venetian Red Siennas and Umbers Light Red Cappagh Brown Red Oxides 

 Mars Colours Terre Verte Prussian Brown Cobalt Colours Coeruleum Smalt Copper 

 Pigments Malachite Bremen Green Scheele's Green Emerald Green Verdigris Bruns- 

 wick Green Non-arsenical Greens Copper Blues Ultramarine Carbon Pigments Ivory 

 Black Lamp Black Bistre Naples Yellow Arsenic Sulphides : Orpiment, Realgar 

 Cadmium Yellow Vandyck Brown. Chapter IV., Organic Pigments. Prussian Blue 

 Natural Lakes Cochineal Carmine Crimson Lac Dye Scarlet Madder Alizarin Cam- 

 peachy Quercitron Rhamnus Brazil Wood Alkanet Santal Wood Archil Coal-tar 

 Lakes Red Lakes Alizarin Compounds Orange and Yellow Lakes Green and Blue Lakes 

 Indigo Dragon's Blood Gamboge Sepia Indian Yellow, Puree Bitumen, Asphaltum, 

 Mummy. Index. 



LEAD AND ITSJCCOMPOUNDS. By k Tuos. LAMBERT, 

 Technical and Consulting Chemist. Demy 8vo. 200 pp. Forty Illus- 

 trations. 1902. Price 7s. 6d. ; India and Colonies, 8s. ; Other Countries, 

 8s. 6d. net. Plans and Diagrams. 



Contents. 



Chapters L, History Ores of Lead. II., Geographical Distribution of the Lead Industry. 

 III., Chemical and Physical Properties of Lead Alloys of Lead Compounds of Lead. 

 IV., Dressing of Lead Ores. V., Smelting of Lead Ores Smelting in the Scotch or American 

 Ore-hearth Smelting in the Shaft or Blast Furnace. VI., Condensation of Lead Fume. 

 VII., Desilverisation, or the Separation of Silver from Argentiferous Lead Cupellation. 

 VIII., The Manufacture of Lead Pipes and Sheets. IX., Protoxide of Lead Litharge and 

 Massicot Red Lead or Minium X., Lead Poisoning. XL, Lead Substitutes. XII., Zinc 

 and its Compounds. XIII., Pumice Stone. XIV., Drying Oils and Siccatives. XV., Oil of 

 Turpentine Resin. XVI., Classification of Mineral Pigments. XVII., Analvsis of Raw and 

 Finished Products. Tables. Index 



