On the right track

Róisín Inglesby

Raffaellino del Garbo (also known as Raffaelle de Capponi and Raffaelle de Carli) (Italian, San Lorenzo a Vigliano, ca. 1470-after 1527). The Angel of the Annunciation (Cartoon for an Embroidery), 1466-1524. Pen and brown ink, brush and brown wash, highlighted with white gouache, over black chalk on paper washed brown; outlines of design and framing outlines pricked and with traces of rubbed black pouncing dust. 3 13/16 in. (diam.). The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund, 1912, 12.56.5a.

If you spend enough time with historic design drawings, you will probably run into one that is punctured with dozens of small holes and smeared with a fine layer of black powder. What might at first appear to be pest damage or disrepair actually indicates a crucial step in the making process: the stage when the design is transferred from paper to the final material. Known as “pricking and pouncing,” the technique involves scoring a track of tiny perforations along the outline of the drawing, then rubbing fine powder – or pounce – through the holes to create a silhouette on the destination material below.

While pounce can be made from various substances, charcoal has been used for the purpose for centuries. ‘How-to’ manuals encouraging the development and appreciation of artisanal skills outlined the process for the curious amateur. Mary Thomas’s Embroidery Book (1936) lists the necessary materials, including a special ‘pricker’ which resembles a thick pin mounted into a handle, a pad of soft cloth or felt, and powdered charcoal (or alternatively, powdered chalk, for pouncing on to a dark surface). “Mix charcoal with a little chalk, otherwise it is difficult to blow off cleanly,” Thomas advises. “Dip the little pad into charcoal… and dab, then rub it firmly all over the surface of the paper so that the powder is forced through the little holes.” Once the transfer is complete and the superfluous pounce discarded, “The design must be fixed on the material with a fine paint brush and a watercolour paint, as the powder dots would rub away at a touch.”

While other transfer methods were available by the early 20th century, including iron-on transfers and carbon paper, pricking and pouncing still had several advantages, especially for the amateur artist. All the tools were inexpensive and readily available, their air of everyday domesticity reinforced by the fact that a sewing needle could be used as a pricker, and the recommendation from one author, in 1912, that “a piece of old silk hose tightly rolled up makes an excellent pad for the purpose.” Unlike an iron-on transfer, a pricked drawing could be reused multiple times, and so was ideal for homemade designs (as opposed to patterns purchased from professional designers).

Charcoal pouncing was also used by professional embroiderers, whose work experienced a boom in nineteenth-century Britain, stimulated by increasing demand for ecclesiastical vestments and furnishings. A partially colored design for a bishop’s miter by the Gothic Revival architect-designer A.W.N. Pugin, from 1840, is a good example of a drawing acting as a hard-working, communicative object, a paper emissary between designer and maker. The sheet bears notes in various hands, including the command 'take care of this dra[w]ing,' a clear indication of its importance in the design process. Prominent prick marks and the dark shadow of charcoal pounce show that Pugin’s design was transferred to fabric on a 1:1 scale – already precisely measured to fit a bishop’s head.

A.W.N. Pugin (designer). Eclesiastical design, 19th century-20th century. Pen and ink and watercolor on laid paper. 22 1/4 x 17 1/4 in. Given by the Community of St. John Baptist, E.1162-2012. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London. [back and front]

While the Royal School of Needlework still considers a prick and pounce kit an ‘indispensable’ purchase – you can buy them on its website – the technique is also found in more unexpected places. Hana Sunny Whaler, of The Sunny Sign Co. based in Stroud, Gloucestershire, is a traditional Signwriter who specializes in pub signs, murals and advertising graphics. (Fig. 4) The team draw their designs on thin paper, which is pricked and then pasted to the wall.

They use a specially designed Pounce Pad which contains various ingredients including charcoal (though a sock filled with powder can work in an emergency!). “The pounce pad is an essential part of the signwriter’s kit box, and always has been,” Whaler says. “It works on all surfaces, from rough brick to smooth glass, suiting the varied nature of our work.” Once the client approves the placement – it’s easy enough to reposition, simply by wiping off the pounce and starting again – they fill the outline with paint, and when the paint is dry, rub away any traces of the powdered guide.

“Frequently people ask what we are doing when using paper patterns, and suggest we are cheating by using one,” adds Whaler. “We always say it’s a method as old as the trade itself, and there is no other technique as handy or simple to execute on site, or at height. As for cheating - we just say that Michelangelo apparently used the technique on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, which normally shuts them up!”

An artisan at work for the Sunny Sign Co, founded by Jake Tyler and Hana Sunny Whaler.


Róisin Inglesby is a curator and historian who specialises in craft and design. After curatorial roles at the V&A, Tower of London, and Teen Museum, Tokyo, since 2018 she has been Curator at William Morris Gallery in East London. Recent exhibitions include Art Without Heroes: Mingei (2024), Young Poland (2021) and William Morris and the Bauhaus (2019). In 2024 Inglesby was named one of Apollo magazine's 40 Under 40 for her work at the intersection of art and craft.

Brilliant Move

Brilliant Move is the Brooklyn-based creative studio of Marci Hunt LeBrun specializing in building websites on the Squarespace platform – among many other things.

I love working with small businesses, nonprofits, and other creatives to help them organize their ideas, hone their vision, and make their web presence the best it can be. And I'm committed to keeping the process as simple, transparent, and affordable as possible.

https://brilliantmove.nyc
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