Bronze Casting: The Lost Wax Process

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 52

  • @camilookuinghttons2690
    @camilookuinghttons2690 7 лет назад +48

    This is the best video about lost wax casting in this site. Very clear, brief, no comments to distract you, and goes straight to the point. I learned a lot from it, since I am starting doing this technique, and so far my results are great. Furthermore, I appreciate very much the "silence": no talking, no music!

    • @SlayingArt
      @SlayingArt 6 лет назад

      Hi Camilo, what are you using for investment/ceramic shell and dowels/nails/chaplets?

    • @CONEHEADDK
      @CONEHEADDK 2 года назад

      I was taught it "the East German way", and I have never seen it done that way anywhere else. Strange since it's a better, more effective/fool proof way.

  • @mjstow
    @mjstow 4 года назад +8

    Outstanding visualization of the process, which was way more complicated than I'd imagined.

  • @Jellyfishmz12
    @Jellyfishmz12 3 года назад +3

    Beyond grateful for this video! Must have taken so many hours to create this animation. I was looking for a book on this method... with a short video you saved me hours and hours and taught me so much. Thank you!

  • @Leftseat52UT
    @Leftseat52UT 2 года назад

    Awesome presentation with all the key steps clearly depicted and explained. Kudos, Amon Carter Museum!

  • @The_Aestheticslife
    @The_Aestheticslife 2 года назад +1

    The great harappa civilization! Which gifted many techniques to the world.

  • @akash_chaudhary_
    @akash_chaudhary_ 7 лет назад +17

    this technique was practiced during the Harappa Civilization(2000 B.C-1500 B.C)

  • @jairomerchan1710
    @jairomerchan1710 5 лет назад +2

    Increíblemente didáctico 🔇🎥⚙️🗜🔩🔧🔎💯💯☑️

  • @vadymbielikov6526
    @vadymbielikov6526 3 года назад +1

    doesn't gelatin melt under hot wax layer?

  • @lifecastinggreece7239
    @lifecastinggreece7239 3 года назад +2

    Nice video!
    What kind of material is the "investment"?
    And its left inside i gather, right?

  • @cyrushazari8461
    @cyrushazari8461 8 лет назад +1

    Thank you for posting a very clear and informative video

  • @aashishjangra
    @aashishjangra 6 лет назад +4

    What happened with investment is in the wax mold

  • @JarethGarza
    @JarethGarza 4 года назад +2

    Is the Investment core left inside the final product?

  • @bilgaissa5831
    @bilgaissa5831 2 года назад

    Please when I pour the melted copper into the heart it starts to boil and the resulting shape is distorted why

  • @علییوسفی-ه9ث
    @علییوسفی-ه9ث 2 года назад

    Thank you for the good video, can you tell me the reason for using iron nails? Why

    • @khalidcabrero6204
      @khalidcabrero6204 Год назад

      You mean the chapelets? It is to hold the inner core plaster in place. Without the metal nails or pins, then when the wax melts out, the core will become loose and drop. So you need the nails to suspend it in space. You want the molten bronze to fill the lost wax space between the external plaster and internal core. If the internal core is not suspended by the pins, it will drop and there will be no space between external & internal plaster towards the bottom for the molten bronze to go. You'd only end up with a half-statue. So the pins suspend the core up in space and makes sure the molten bronze goes all the way around. Of course, by having the pins, the final bronze statue will have a few little holes (where the pins were). So part of the final stage is plugging those holes with tiny bronze plugs.

  • @charlesmonter4111
    @charlesmonter4111 2 года назад

    Es agrable ver estos vídeos ilustrativos felicidades,y la temperatura del molde cual seria,también la de fundición? ,Se los agradecería su información.Gracias.

  • @vijayh.2619
    @vijayh.2619 3 года назад +7

    Who is watching this video after reading NCERT Lost wax techniques in Bronze dancing girl and bull of kalibanga for UPSC CSE.😁

  • @goldenestimme
    @goldenestimme 3 года назад

    and what about an inside core investment ?

  • @arindamkhanikar8682
    @arindamkhanikar8682 3 года назад

    Bhal lagise kela

  • @camilookuinghttons2690
    @camilookuinghttons2690 6 лет назад

    Which is the formula for "gelatin", and how thick is the application? Thanks!

  • @AdultingWithSamnang
    @AdultingWithSamnang 6 лет назад +12

    Complicated af... im failing my humanities 101 class 🙂🔥

  • @Centauriel
    @Centauriel 6 лет назад +1

    So the final bronze piece is still filled with investment core, right?
    What is the gelatine for exactly?

    • @lauchsalat2998
      @lauchsalat2998 6 лет назад +2

      The core is broken out and the gelatin is there to prevent the mold from sticking to the sculpture

  • @Coloursss27
    @Coloursss27 Год назад

    Thankyou

  • @fouedmzali6845
    @fouedmzali6845 2 года назад

    very interesting !

  • @amirpashashabestari8464
    @amirpashashabestari8464 7 лет назад

    Thank ya very much indeed ! Useful video !

  • @jonasvaitiekunas2713
    @jonasvaitiekunas2713 6 лет назад

    Whats the name of this guy?!

  • @h7opolo
    @h7opolo 3 года назад

    best tutorial

  • @SenorRu
    @SenorRu 5 лет назад

    That investment core is pretty smart.

  • @amirpashashabestari8464
    @amirpashashabestari8464 7 лет назад +13

    How great it would be if you added back ground music plus some sound effects !

  • @khalidcabrero6204
    @khalidcabrero6204 Год назад

    It is insane how ancient this technique is. It seems so complicated, but every old Bronze Age culture (Indus valley, Persia, Mesopotamia, Egypt, Mediterranean Europe West Africa, etc.) adopted the lost wax casting method very early, pretty much as described here (except the gelatin part - that's a more modern twist). Except the ancient Chinese for some reason. The Chinese used the "piece-mold" casting method. Which seems more straightforward, but is in practice more cumbersome and yields coarser bronzes. Not sure why Chinese metallurgy didn't embrace the lost wax method. Certainly seemed capable, and would have known of examples from India and Persia. Beeswax too expensive in China?

  • @constantinsimion72
    @constantinsimion72 8 лет назад

    Heloo I have a question..What kind of mixtures i can use for the patina ?

  • @علییوسفی-ه9ث
    @علییوسفی-ه9ث 2 года назад

    The film was informative

  • @mallikarjunautomobileworks1553
    @mallikarjunautomobileworks1553 6 лет назад

    Nice sir I like it

  • @sharonanand1056
    @sharonanand1056 2 года назад

    super

  • @vax_gax_lax_bax_max_vax2578
    @vax_gax_lax_bax_max_vax2578 7 лет назад +1

    So why is it lost if we know how to do it?

    • @assassin01620
      @assassin01620 6 лет назад +2

      +Camilo O'Kuinghttons If you were joking then ignore me. It is not called "Lost Wax" because we forgot how to do it. It is called lost wax because you end up completely removing the wax (when you melt it out). The wax gets "lost" in a way.

  • @matthiasmeier-xk4ih
    @matthiasmeier-xk4ih 8 месяцев назад

    Wenn ich das geschmolzene Kupfer in das Herz gieße, fängt es bitte an zu kochen und die resultierende Form ist verzerrt

  • @richardmoss5934
    @richardmoss5934 4 года назад +1

    Hopefully this will generate enough views so that there will be enough money to purchase a microphone!

  • @Shubhamkumar-cq5wt
    @Shubhamkumar-cq5wt 7 лет назад

    My ears are bleeding⚠️⚠️..btw It wud be awesome if you add audio to the video.👌

  • @harveylewis3522
    @harveylewis3522 2 года назад

    ded vid

  • @ericdebord
    @ericdebord 6 лет назад +2

    how the hell is it called the lost wax method when everyone knows it and uses it.
    how stupid...

    • @gtPixelz
      @gtPixelz 6 лет назад +7

      The technic is called "Lost wax" derived from losing the wax from the mold.

    • @djnima
      @djnima 5 лет назад +2

      hahaha ... that's not what is meant by "lost". we didn't lose the method, we lost the WAX! lol

    • @Shyamji-sj3sq
      @Shyamji-sj3sq 5 лет назад

      Thanks sir