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cire perdue

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cire perdue

Bronze-casting method. A model is made of wax and enclosed in an envelope of clay and plaster, with a small hole in the bottom.

When heat is applied, the wax melts and runs away through the hole, and the clay and plaster becomes a hard mould. Molten bronze is poured in and allowed to cool; then the clay envelope is cut away.

The result is a bronze cast that exactly reproduces the original and is formed in a single piece. The bronze will be hollow if the original wax model was made around a core of burnt clay. The earliest examples of the technique date from around 3000 BC, found both in Ancient Egypt and Ur.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Bronze''s importance over the years has been seen by many, virtually all Indian casting in bronze is done using the cire perdue (lost wax) process.
Vase was made by an ancient process known as cire perdue and involves a wax model being covered in plaster and heated
The Christie's sale catalogue described it as 'a cire perdue vase with green staining'.
 
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