See Section Three for main entry
The profile of a man which I have illustrated is typical of Hamlet's painting on card. Transparency is achieved by the thinning of black water-colour pigment, though one technical feature of Hamlet's painting on card is his use of Chinese white to show strands of hair which lie against the face. He did not use as much variety in colour as William Hamlet the younger (q.v.): black, and thinned black, seem to have been the rule for his work.
Hamlet was working at a time when women's dresses were of light-weight, thin material. On his silhouettes of women, he paints dresses in thinned pigment; details of lace, ribbons and hair are finely executed. The bust-line finish varies, as may be seen from the illustrations. A deep shadow where the arm emerges from the dress is a characteristic feature.
Hamlet's silhouettes painted on card were usually framed in papier mâché. He frequently used a frame with a rose and leaf hanger.
Ills. 820-822, 977, 984