casting bronzeの例文
- It is also widely used for casting bronze sculptures.
- In K鋘elacker in 1923, a shop used for casting bronze from about 1300 BC was discovered.
- Joun was born to a family of metalworkers and was famous for his skill in casting bronze.
- Casting bronze was a new technique ."
- Szostalo uses cold casting bronze-- bronze in a base of resin-- to make a variety of statues.
- Fowler's sculptural practice was mentored by Dr Tim Edwards, who taught Fowler the Lost Wax Method of casting bronze sculptures.
- Working with Tobin allowed Nangle to perfect techniques for casting bronze and new approaches to innovating the ceramic shell casting process.
- Their tradition holds that he taught the Benin metal workers the art of casting bronze using lost-wax techniques during the thirteenth century.
- The technique used in casting bronze cannons was so similar to the bell that the two were often looked upon as a connected enterprise.
- Large workshops for casting iron, casting bronze, minting coins, making weapons, making pottery and making bone objects were all found in the eastern city.
- I began to understand what they meant, not just in terms of casting bronze but in terms of discipline and planning, of organization and command ."
- Chou Yin Hsiang himself came to Hong Kong in 1935, and by 1977 was the proprietor of Jeh Hsing Metal Works and still casting bronze for HSBC.
- Chou Yin Hsiang himself came to Hong Kong in 1935, and by 1977 was the proprietor of Jeh Hsing Metal Works and still casting bronze for HSBC.
- They argued that potential Greek influence is particularly evident in some terracotta figures such as those of acrobats, as well as the technique used for casting bronze sculptures.
- On a tour of the workshop, the artist explains the Lost Wax Process, a method of casting bronze that is thousands of years old and still used today.
- Announcing that he was installing a new emperor chosen by an ancient Xianbei method of casting bronze figures, Erzhu Rong summoned the officials of the city to meet their new emperor.
- Copper for casting bronze pieces became increasingly scarce to the Confederacy throughout the war and became acute in November 1863 when the Ducktown copper mines near Chattanooga were lost to Union forces.
- They were still hunters, but had domesticated animals; they were fairly skillful metallurgists, casting bronze in moulds of stone and clay, and they were also agriculturists, cultivating beans, the vine, wheat and flax.
- To the fourth phase ( 3rd to mid-1st centuries BC ) belong defensive walls, the so-called small gate, sanctuaries and cultic buildings ( temples, altars sacrificial platforms ), and the remains of a foundry for casting bronze statues.
- The increasingly ornate surfaces of succeeding bronzes _ a three-legged caldronlike ding ( food vessel ), for example _ indicate a rapidly developing grasp of the possibilities of casting bronze in clay molds that were incised with intricate spirals and zoomorphic faces.