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zougan@Ϋ›Ζ
KEY WORD :@art history / crafts
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Inlay. It is also written ΫŠα (elephant eye). A decoration technique in which the surface of such materials as metal, pottery and wood is carved and filled with metal, stone, shell, ivory or horn. Inlay has been used on swords since the Kofun period, and on celadon ceramics since the 10c. Inlay variants include: *mokuga –Ψ‰ζ and *raden —†ην. In dyeing and weaving, there is kirihame zougan Ψ›ΖΫ›Ζ (openwork inlay). Techniques include: itozougan Ž…Ϋ›Ζ (thread inlay), also called senzougan όΫ›Ζ (line inlay), the simplest and oldest procedure in which a thread-like metal is set in carved patterns; hirazougan •½Ϋ›Ζ (flat inlay) in which flat sheets are inlaid to be the same height with the ground surface; takaniku zougan ‚“χΫ›Ζ (high mounted inlay), used for swords, where material is set on a high-relief metal ground; nunome zougan •z–ΪΫ›Ζ (texture inlay) in which gold or silver in wire or thin sheets is hammered into a finely-carved pattern; kirihame zougan, a method of inlaying metal in an open-work design on a base metal so the same pattern can be seen from either side; and tokashikomi zougan ηχžΫ›Ζ (rubbed in inlay), in which the shallow-carved surface of metal is rubbed with gold leaf. These techniques are used for decoration of butsugu •§‹ο (Buddhist altar fittings), furniture, arms and swords.
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