Thread: gold hilt
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Old 12th July 2009, 03:00 PM   #12
kronckew
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that is interesting, i found a notation that chinese cinnabar statues were actually made of laquer with cinnabar pigment which was built up in layers before being carved....

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Lacquered art pieces have been produced in China for many centuries. Lacquer is produced from the sap of the lac tree, which is commonly found in central and southern China. Various pigments are added to the resulting lacquer to change its color, and then the lacquer is applied in many coats to an art object. After many coats, the lacquer is carved, producing unique designs, patterns, and subjects. On lacquer, which was prominent throughout China, was cinnabar lacquer, which was made by mixing a seemingly innocuous mineral called cinnabar with lacquer. Cinnabar lacquer was used on a wide variety of pieces ranging in size from jewelry pieces to large ceramic or metal vases.

Cinnabar is a mineral that appears near volcanoes or hot springs. It is rich in mercury and, when ground into a fine powder, produces a deep red tint. It was believed at one point that the mercury's toxic effects could be neutralized with heat, but it appears that science has proven this theory incorrect. However, Cinnabar lacquer was produced and carved for many years before the toxic effects of mercury were discovered.

The production of a cinnabar lacquer piece is a fascinating and time consuming process. First, the base work was produced, whether it was a vase or a brooch. Next, layer after layer of cinnabar lacquer was applied. Often layers would alternate in color to achieve a multicolor effect in the design, and some pieces would feature more than 300 coats of lacquer. Each layer would have to dry before a new one was applied, so some pieces could take almost half a year to prepare – some larger pieces could take years! Once the lacquer layers had reached the correct depth, the carving process could begin.

Carving a cinnabar lacquer piece was a very delicate process, and could take the artist many years to complete. Care was needed, since a slip could require filling with many new layers of lacquer or could necessitate a complete re-do of the entire project. Once the carving was finished, another layer of lacquer would be added to seal the carving. Clear lacquer with no cinnabar was often used in this final step to keep the piece from spreading mercury to the skin – this was especially important for jewelry pieces.

Many cinnabar lacquer pieces are still available at auction, and are highly prized for the richness of color and intricacy of carving. Minimizing exposure to these older pieces is essential to prevent any contamination, but pieces kept behind glass can still be a valuable part of any collection. While true cinnabar lacquer pieces are hardly ever produced today, many carvers work with simulated chemical cinnabar in their lacquer. This has allowed carved lacquer pieces to remain in production, without the harmful effects possible when working with cinnabar.
maybe we are converging on it. pine rosin and brick dust are a traditional western cutlers cement, jabung as noted above is much the same, throw in agm's shellac. red powdered stone/brick all much of a sameness all of a sudden, some sort of resinous shellac/laquer combined with a red powdered stone/brick used as a cutler's cement. we now cover east and west.

p.s. nepal uses tree rosin, dried cow dung filler, powdered stone and/or bark as their cutlers cement for filling and securing khukuri grips, it's called laha. stinks when heated too! strong and durable, and reuseable. want a new grip? heat & pull. reverse for new grip. reminds me of the indian tulwar, grips and blades kept seperately in armoury, only put together when war declared. slowed down arming rebels or mutineers during peacetime. similar rosin based cutler cement involved there too!

Last edited by kronckew; 12th July 2009 at 03:23 PM.
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