Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Brass and Enamel Dish

mrcolorz's loves1142 of 1502One Of The Last Surviving Antique "Drinking Birds?" "Tico Bobble Bird?"1904 Liberty Nickel
6
Love it
0
Like it

mrcolorzmrcolorz loves this.
fleafinderfleafinder loves this.
SEAN68SEAN68 loves this.
OneGoodFindOneGoodFind loves this.
auraaura loves this.
EfesgirlEfesgirl loves this.
See 4 more
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 8 years ago

    jeneric
    (348 items)

    I got this at the Thrift store yesterday. Enamel dish. I love the colors in this one. That's all I know.

    Mystery Solved

    Comments

    1. Efesgirl Efesgirl, 8 years ago
      This isn't Cloisonne. There were no wires used to create the design on your bowl. The bowl was made by machine, the design pressed into the metal and then colored.

      http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/clos/hd_clos.htm

      "Cloisonné is the technique of creating designs on metal vessels with colored-glass paste placed within enclosures made of copper or bronze wires, which have been bent or hammered into the desired pattern. Known as cloisons (French for “partitions”), the enclosures generally are either pasted or soldered onto the metal body. The glass paste, or enamel, is colored with metallic oxide and painted into the contained areas of the design. The vessel is usually fired at a relatively low temperature, about 800°C. Enamels commonly shrink after firing, and the process is repeated several times to fill in the designs. Once this process is complete, the surface of the vessel is rubbed until the edges of the cloisons are visible. They are then gilded, often on the edges, in the interior, and on the base."

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.