Manuscript treatise on painting, mezzotint engraving, and other art techniques, by Edward Luttrell, written in 1683. The unpublished text appears to be in Luttrell's hand throughout (exept for a later addendum), in pen and brown ink. Luttrell gives precise instructions, with occasional diagrams, for the various branches of art mentioned in the title. He emphasizes in his preface that he does not "designe to make a rhetorical preamble concerning painting for that is out of my sphear, butt to discover to you in the plainest terms first the difficulty of itt and then the ready way to attaine itt" (p. [v]). His notes on the art of the "mezzo tinto" are perhaps the first detailed account in English of the technique of mezzotint engraving. The manuscript is effusively dedicated by Edward Luttrell "to his much honored and most ingenuous kinswoman Maddam Dorothy Lutrell." In the important section on "Mezzo Tinto" (pages 45-47), Luttrell describes the steel roller that the artist must use to ground a copper plate and details the process that he says was "first invented by Prince Rupert and improved by W Vailant to whome the Prince taught itt." To obtain the necessary equipment for mezzotint engraving, Luttrell notes, "You may have severall of them 'a roule of good steel' made some finer and some courser by one Haines, a file cutter att the two Crowns in ye Little Minories." In other sections of the treatise, Luttrell describes the steps that an aspiring artist must take in order to learn drawing and painting, describing and illustrating the proportions of a human face, for example, in his section on portraiture. Luttrell covers such vital information as the flattery of one's subject, describing how to disguise flaws in a sitter's countenance. In addition to portraiture, Lutrell instructs his reader on limning, the painting of miniatures, the accurate depiction of fabrics, glass transfer painting, and "the manner of washing [i.e. coloring] of prints." The final section (pages 55-68) appears to be in a later, unidentified hand. It offers detailed instruction on varnishing and japanning. The entry on the japanning of boxes instructs: "strew ye speckles on by taking a few between yr finger & thumb letting ym fall gently & as they fall distribute ym with yr breath gently & that will lay ym gradually alike ... " (p. 57).