BRITISH GUM is made by heating starch in an oven to between 600° and 700°, when its cells (as seen under the microscope) become obliterated, and it acquires a brown colour, together with the properties of gum. It is used largely in calico-printing to thicken the colours.
BRITISH GUM
article · 271 chars · lineage ↗ · page image at NLS ↗