💥Did you enjoy this tutorial? If you want to learn more about how to restore your ceramics through the ancient Japanese art of Kintsugi, check out Clara Graziolino’s online course “Introduction to Kintusgi: Repair Your Pottery With Gold”: www.domestika.org/en/courses/1578-introduction-to-kintsugi-repair-your-pottery-with-gold?ClaraGraziolino_enYOU
@@rochellealberti6688Can you send a link to some instructions for that? Everything I found online showed the traditional method using a special lacquer and gold dust. I would love to know how they kept the molten metal only in the cracks.
I like it; I was wondering if i could use kit instead of 2 components glue and then put gold plaque on it? And I wondered about the ten minute wait.. the rest of the mixed glue will be hard or do you have to proportion it very well?
Agreed. I thought it was going to somehow be a quick guide on it, but nope, it's just 10 minute epoxy and some gold pigment powder. Kinda disappointing, but good if you're just wanting to do it for a craft or prop I guess.
@@TsahayluFa do you know if the bacteria being harbored is also an issue with traditional kintsugi? Or is the urushi like a disinfectant? Thanks for your time!
If you use modern methods like epoxy, no it won't be food safe. You can use the traditional method and use urushi, a Japanese lacquer, and that would be food safe.
And the worldwide items sell for and arm and leg of a price :S So food safe epoxy could be ok, not sure need to do more research on it :) Good luck though @@meglivica1001
Possibly, but might not be food safe? and depending on the composition of the gold acrylic paint, it may not have the same sheen/level of polish as traditional kintsugi
Absolutely not Kintsugi, it’s like someone who heard a story about kintsugi while drinking tried to explain it the next day to you and that was all the research you did…
💥Did you enjoy this tutorial? If you want to learn more about how to restore your ceramics through the ancient Japanese art of Kintsugi, check out Clara Graziolino’s online course “Introduction to Kintusgi: Repair Your Pottery With Gold”: www.domestika.org/en/courses/1578-introduction-to-kintsugi-repair-your-pottery-with-gold?ClaraGraziolino_enYOU
Cool music, good instructional pace and information. Thank you. 😊
Very simple and short! I like it
Why so many butthurt people? This method is fine get over yourself
Very helpful, thank you.
Thank you for demystifying this for me!! I always thought I had to melt down gold to do this. 😂. So easy. So fun. I will definitely be doing this.
For true kitsugi you do have to melt gold.
@@rochellealberti6688Can you send a link to some instructions for that? Everything I found online showed the traditional method using a special lacquer and gold dust. I would love to know how they kept the molten metal only in the cracks.
@@lornacy It was done by mixing the metal with urushi
@@rochellealberti6688 That's the lacquer, right? But I can't imagine you would mix melted gold with lacquer.
@@lornacy I am not sure. Those are just things I have read and been told by a friend from Japan...but chances are I missed something in translation!!
Very nice!
Jo
Clara!!
I like it; I was wondering if i could use kit instead of 2 components glue and then put gold plaque on it? And I wondered about the ten minute wait.. the rest of the mixed glue will be hard or do you have to proportion it very well?
You probably have to mix a new batch of glue for each crack.
This is not Kintsugi, it is gluesugi or epoxsugi.
Agreed. I thought it was going to somehow be a quick guide on it, but nope, it's just 10 minute epoxy and some gold pigment powder. Kinda disappointing, but good if you're just wanting to do it for a craft or prop I guess.
I think the technical term is shitsugi
Man, what crawled up your asses?
@@stefanogarbuglia Agreed
What is the different I don't know
can i still eat from the plate? or is this more for decor?
No. Not with epoxy. Also, unless the pottery has vitrified, the raw surface will possibly harbor bacteria since it's porous.
@@TsahayluFa do you know if the bacteria being harbored is also an issue with traditional kintsugi? Or is the urushi like a disinfectant?
Thanks for your time!
Non vitrified pieces are not a problem if you care for them well, and if the clay is food safe. If you clean it then it won’t harbor bacteria.
That has to be less than the bare minimum instructional video. I will look elsewhere
Is this food safe?
If you use modern methods like epoxy, no it won't be food safe. You can use the traditional method and use urushi, a Japanese lacquer, and that would be food safe.
@@khmerman41486 Thank you very much ~< or at least in big online shops
@@meglivica1001 You could find glue or epoxy with food safe standard instead of urushi
And the worldwide items sell for and arm and leg of a price :S
So food safe epoxy could be ok, not sure need to do more research on it :)
Good luck though @@meglivica1001
Lana del Rey said
Can I use gold acrylic paint if I don't have gold powder?
Possibly, but might not be food safe? and depending on the composition of the gold acrylic paint, it may not have the same sheen/level of polish as traditional kintsugi
Absolutely not Kintsugi, it’s like someone who heard a story about kintsugi while drinking tried to explain it the next day to you and that was all the research you did…
Looks like a duck, quacks like a duck…
Nice, but this is not kintsugi.
Not kintsugi and also not clean job 👎