Home1810 Edition

BLOOM

Volume 3 · 205 words · 1810 Edition

mass of iron after having undergone the first hammering called blomery. It has yet to undergo many hammerings before it become iron fit for the smith's use, and be first made what they call the ancony. See Ancony.

Blood, Peter, a Flemish painter, whose works are not frequently seen in these kingdoms; nor are they easily purchased in Holland, being carefully preserved in private collections, and are highly esteemed. The subjects he chose to paint were always taken from the lowest life; such as boors drinking, feasting, dancing, or quarreling; shepherds piping, and sometimes marriages of villagers. He was a faithful, and indeed too fervent an imitator of nature; never departing from the actions, attitudes, or draperies of his models. He showed a good knowledge of the chiaroscuro and perspective; he had a delicate manner of penciling, and his colouring was mellow; but he had no idea of elegance: yet his pictures have in many respects great merit, and his defects seem rather imputable to the taste of his country than to his own genius; some of his works being for the lightness of the touch, the neatness of handling, and transparency of colour, equal to the best of his time. He died in 1667.