RERAMIC STUDIO 
m 
115 and 116. In this transfer she has acquired all of Miss 
Armstrong's water color studies for china in the conventional, 
semi-conventional, Japanese, etc. 
The Fine Arts Journal of Chicago writes of this young 
artist as follows : Miss Reynolds is a graduate of the Cincinnati 
Art Academy, a pupil of Duveneck, a member of the "Woman's 
Art Club" of that city, and for many years studied under 
Vincent DuMond, Walter Appleton Clark, and others as a 
member of the Art Students' League of New York. While a 
student of portraiting, exhibiting in the Cincinnati Art Museum, 
Miss Reynold's love of color and nature led her to paint china, 
in which she is wonderfully successful. 
IRIS. LOHENGRIN— PHOTO BY WALTER S. STILLMAN Treatment by Jessie M. Bard 
THESE flowers are an old rose color marked with darker 
streaks of lavender, with rich orange beard. Paint 
flowers, the three upper leaves, with Yellow Brown, Blood 
Red and a little Violet. The lower leaves are Violet and Copen ; 
hagen Blue. The markings are Royal Purple and Blood Red; 
the beard is Yellow Brown, Albert Yellow. The stamen is 
Yellow Brown and Violet. The stems are Blood Red and 
Violet. The leaves are Shading Green and Grey for Flesh. The 
background is Violet, Blood Red and Grey for Flesh. 
Second Firing — Use same color used in first firing. Do not 
go over the lights, just strengthen the shadow side. 
