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You now have your horse (or tiger) primed a pure white with jewels and eyes 
  masked off and you can not put off painting it any longer. You must decide 
  what color to paint it! If you have planned in advance what colors you will 
  use or if you are doing a restoration the next step is a piece of cake. If, 
  however, you have no idea in mind or you have not sanded or carved "in color" 
  you are now faced with a ghostly monster!
   
	 
		  
		Sneaky the Tiger, 1909
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  In a restoration 
  you can prepare by extracting paint chips from the original colors and create 
  a blueprint for the authentic colors. Even these original colors can be 
  mixed brighter or in a more modern tint or shade if desired. Your color 
  choices should take into account the effect of time, exposure and oxidation of 
  the original paint colors.
  I have become more of a realist when dealing with original paint colors. We 
  tend to forget that the carousels were created to generate income. If no one 
  picked a particular horse to ride due to its "colors" it was repainted during 
  the off-season. Or the colors were often changed to reflect the popular colors 
  of the day...even the dreaded olive green and orange of the 70's.
   
	 
		  
		Repainted to be similar to the original paint
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  Perhaps we are 
  so intent in restoring an "original color" we end up restoring a "bad day" for 
  the painter. He may have been faced with deadlines or shipping dates and 
  simply didn't have time to change something that just didn't work. Or maybe he 
  changed the color by putting on a new layer of paint before it left the 
  factory. We have thus restored the wrong color! The marvelous carvings of the 
  early carousel animals carried the work, the beauty is still there. The 
  overall impact of the entire carousel was still there, but an individual horse 
  may not be able to stand alone in its color composition.
  
	 
		  
		The tiger as it appeared in the beginning years of
		its realistic painting.
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  Another idea is 
  to research the time period in which your carved piece was created. If it is 
  done in a carving style of the 1895 period it should reflect the popular hues 
  of that period. Sources for this information can be found in your library 
  under home furnishing, architecture, and fashion. Many wallpaper and paint 
  companies provide patterns and color collections for a certain historical time 
  period. Maybe the new carving is to be placed in your living room and can 
  reflect the colors that you like and have chosen to live with. A simple piece 
  of fabric may be the beginning of your color choices.
  Be prepared to make changes in your plan. Sometimes what works in your head 
  or on paper just won't work when painted on the carving. Change it . . . it is only 
  paint! Let the horse evolve. If you don't like the color now you probably 
  aren't going to like it later!
   
	 
		  
		All striped up, and a friendlier nose
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  The carousel 
  animals carved in America between the 1870's and the 1890's were often very 
  simple in carving style but painted with glorious patterns and plaids. This 
  painting style often reflected folk patterns, techniques and tole painting of 
  the homelands of the immigrant carvers and painters.
  
  During the next period,
  the trend was more toward carving style and embellishments that were often of 
  sculptural quality with detail lines carved into the surface. The factory 
  painter simply had to color within the lines. The next stage was the 
  mass-produced animal which again was more simple and stylized in carving 
  style. This was due to the difficulty in casting the intricate carving 
  details. Once again the painter was allowed to be more creative in his 
  technique. 
   It is the painter's job to make the carver look good! Even if they are the 
  same person. If the carousel animal has beautifully carved muscles, the 
  painter can enhance them with shading. If the muscles are lacking, the painter 
  can shade to enhance what isn't there. If the carver had a bad day and forgot 
  to carve a stem or a piece of strap, the painter can paint it in for him. The 
  painter can emphasize the eyes, bring out he shape of a flower, or save the 
  composition with detail, shadow and pattern. They are a team! The painter 
  should treat the carving as a blank canvas and compose his work even though 
  his canvas is now three dimensional.
   
  My example is 
  the comparison of the original paint job on the 1909 Spokane Looff carousel's 
  Sneaky Tiger. The original painting technique used gives the appearance that 
  the stripes were painted on with a ruler. (photo 1) It is definitely not an 
  example of Charles Looff's earlier works which are known for their realistic 
  body painting, marvelous colors and the use of stencils and folk painting. 
  This was definitely a rushed or poor factory painted job. The tiger was carved 
  between 1905 and 1909, the delivery date of the carousel to Spokane. It is 
  branded on the belly "Riverside Rhode Island, a practice which was not begun 
  until 1905.
   The next photo (photo 2) shows how the tiger had changed through the years. 
  It was a good start but still there was room for improvement. It has elaborate 
  carvings and a resident Spider monkey on its back. No original paint was left 
  and no records were kept of the original colors when it was stripped over 20 
  years ago. We had to begin a "new history" on the animal. I was also asked to 
  do something that would make it less frightening as younger children would 
  often refuse to ride him.
   
	 
		  
		The Lemur Monkey
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  The tiger had 
  gone through various metamorphous stages endeavoring to look more realistic. 
  Even though it had been stripped there were layers of blue, red, purple, black 
  and yellow on his trappings. My first step was to do some research for the 
  more realistic body painting. This began with books from the library and 
  visits to a local zoo.
  
  There is nothing like spending an afternoon with a 
  Bengal tiger, staring eye to eye, to give you the feel for his color, his 
  majesty of movement and to realize how well the carving had been done in 
  capturing his power. It would have been a travesty to restore those original 
  jail-house stripes on such a magnificently carved creature. Watercolor studies 
  were done as I continued my research to get a feel for the final painting.
   
	 
		  
		The Spider Monkey, sometimes frightening to small children
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  I soon 
  discovered that the tiger was the most endangered species in the world. Little 
  details were important, such as no two tigers are striped alike but they all 
  have a white triangular patch on the top of their black ears. Perhaps if this 
  one sneaking tiger was painted well it could spark a love for the entire 
  species. This could lead to the saving of the species or at least, some 
  empathy for their plight. In my research I also found that the
  Lemur monkey was indigenous to the same territory of the Bengal tigers 
  in Malaysia. Not only that, but the Lemur is a friendlier looking monkey
  than the Spider monkey!
  
	 
		  
		Sneaky with his kitty nose
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  The final two photos show the results. The soft copper chain (unrealistic) 
  has been replaced with a heavier chain of iron, to hold the power of the large 
  cat. The trappings are the rich purple with shades of blue, the color of 
  royalty. The Zalar style Sphinx carvings are done in a rich antique gold. The 
  inside strap is painted to look like the deep purple of Thai silk highlighted 
  with gold threads.
  
	 
		  
		Sneaky the Tiger with his new stripes!
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  There are subtle touches to soften and overcome his fearsome appearance. A 
  soft pink nose although mature tigers' noses are black. This gives him a 
  "kitty" appearance. The lovely long eyelashes soften the face, making it more 
  feminine and friendlier. Every child who rides "Sneaky" now loves the little 
  white monkey on the back and often places a carousel ring on the tiger's tooth 
  after a loving pat on its nose. Sneaky now takes the youngest rider off to 
  the lands of Aladdin, and as Tony always says "it's just G-r-r-r-r-e-a-t!"
 
 
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		Bette Largent is a professional carousel horse restoration artist from 
		Washington State, and the author of
		Paint The Ponies,
		a guide for those who are interested in learning the art of painting
		carousel figures.
		 
		Click 
		Here
		for information on ordering her book.
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