| Marbling was discovered on the
staircase at Adena. Paint analyst Frank Welsh took a paint chip from the stairs, and under his microscope
saw the marbling. Further, the chip revealed that the stairs had never been stripped of paint,
indicating that the original marbling was still there under layers of paint and varnish. OHS staff carefully
removed the paint on some of the risers and did indeed uncover the original marble pattern, seen on the lower
riser in the photograph below.
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| Marbling is allied to graining, and
both are generally performed, when in the best manner, by painters who confine
themselves entirely to this branch of the trade. There is much skill and ingenuity
shown in imitating the various marbles and porphyries by the study of good slabs
of these materials; and when the selection of colours is judicious, the effect is
certainly extremely rich, and much preferable to the quantity of cold white once
almost universal in ordinary houses. But when the imitations of wood or marble are
badly performed, the effect is, on the contrary, particularly disagreeable. (From,
Thomas Webster, An Encyclopaedia Of Domestic Economy
(New York, 1845), page 76)
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