1000+ questions about gold, silver, and metal leaf; gilding supplies, tools, techniques; edibles; craftwork; and troubleshooting.
The adhesive for dutch gold leaf is usually gilding size. Choose size by surface, leaf type, exposure, tack time, and finish.
Dutch gold leaf usually needs compatible size and sealer because imitation metal leaf can tarnish.
Prepare the surface, apply a compatible size, wait for tack, lay the leaf, and seal after application unless product guidance says otherwise. Gloves or clean handling help prevent fingerprints under the sealer.
Tack timing and compatibility matter. Too wet can drown, wrinkle, or smear leaf; too dry can weaken adhesion. Silver, imitation metal leaf, copper-alloy leaf, and many foil effects often need protection, while high-karat genuine gold may not need the same sealing approach.
Datasheets • Products • Supplies • Tools
Gold leaf adhesive is called gilding size. The correct size, sealer, bole, and tools depend on surface, leaf type, technique, exposure, and desired finish.
Gilding size is the tacky adhesive layer used to attach gold leaf, silver leaf, palladium, platinum, metal leaf, or foil to a prepared surface. Ordinary glue is not a substitute. Tack timing matters: too wet can drown or smear leaf; too dry can fail to bond.
Silver and imitation/metal leaf often need sealing because tarnish or discoloration is a risk. Tools such as a gilder’s tip, knife, cushion, brushes, mops, burnishers, and pads affect results.