@clubman might know how these were done. I think they were probably enamelled originally and he knows a thing or two about proper enamelling.
Application of the colour might have been done a bit like tampo, rolled on with a squeegee and maybe the excess scraped off if done by hand. Then oven cured which flows it out evenly on the surface. Polished up at the end. Just speculating though, I don’t actually know.
I’ve always felt that brass headbadges must have been quite an expensive item to put on a frame. First a set of stamps would have been made up to cut the shape out and then press the features into the badge, then the colouring, curing and polishing. It’s quite a lot of work!
That haa jogged my memory though, I think I saw that these days a mask would be put on the blank, then the profile cut, then sprayed, then mask removed. So the infill would perfectly match the profile. Don’t know if that was possible bitd.
@clubman might know how these were done. I think they were probably enamelled originally and he knows a thing or two about proper enamelling.
Application of the colour might have been done a bit like tampo, rolled on with a squeegee and maybe the excess scraped off if done by hand. Then oven cured which flows it out evenly on the surface. Polished up at the end. Just speculating though, I don’t actually know.
I’ve always felt that brass headbadges must have been quite an expensive item to put on a frame. First a set of stamps would have been made up to cut the shape out and then press the features into the badge, then the colouring, curing and polishing. It’s quite a lot of work!