User Contributed Dictionary
Verb
chasing- present participle of chase
Extensive Definition
Repoussé ( listen) or repoussage listen is a
metalworking technique
in which a malleable
metal is ornamented or
shaped by hammering from
the reverse side. There are few techniques that offer such
diversity of expression while still being relatively
economical.
Chasing () is the opposite technique to repoussé,
and the two are used in conjunction to create a finished
piece.
While repoussé is used to work on the reverse of
the metal to form a raised design on the front, chasing is used to
refine the design on the front of the work by sinking the metal.
The term chasing is derived from the noun "chase", which refers to
a groove, furrow, channel or indentation. The adjectival form is
"chased work". The techniques of repoussé and chasing utilise the
plasticity of metal,
forming shapes by degrees. There is no loss of metal in the
process, as it is stretched locally and the surface remains
continuous. The process is relatively slow, but a maximum of form
is achieved, with one continuous surface of sheet metal of
essentially the same thickness. Direct contact of the tools used is
usually visible in the result, a condition not always apparent in
other techniques, where all evidence of the working method is
eliminated.
Etymology
The word repoussé is French
and means "pushed up", ultimately from Latin pulsare "to
push". Repoussage is actually the correct noun to refer to the technique,
with repoussé being an adjective referring to a piece to which the
technique has been applied (e.g. "repoussé work", "repoussé
piece"); however, in English it has become common to use repoussé
as a noun, and this usage is reflected in this article.
Famous works
A famous contemporary sculpture created with this
technique is the Statue of
Liberty in Upper
New York Bay. The statue was formed by copper repoussé in sections using
wooden structures to shape each piece during the hammering
process.
A second example of monumental copper repoussé sculpture is
Portlandia by
Raymond
Kaskey, which was installed in 1985 in downtown
Portland,
Oregon. And a small example in QtVR you
will find here
http://members.vol.at/schmiede/bergknappe.htm by P.
Netzer.
History
The techniques of repoussé date from Antiquity and have been used widely with gold and silver for fine detailed work and with copper, tin, and bronze for larger sculptures. Among the most famous classical pieces using this technique are the bronze Greek armour plates from the 3rd century BC.During the 3rd
millennium BC, in the Middle East, a variety of semi-mass
production methods were introduced to avoid repetitive free-hand
work. With the simplest technique, sheet gold could be pressed into
designs carved in intaglio in stone, bone, metal or even materials
such as jet. The gold could be worked into the designs with wood
tools or, more commonly, by hammering a wax or lead "force" over
it.
The alternative to pressing gold sheet into a die
is to work it over a design in cameo relief. Here the detail would
be greater on the back of the final design, so some final chasing
from the front was often carried out to sharpen the detail.
The use of patterned punches dates back to the
first half of the 2nd
millennium BC, if not far earlier. The simplest patterned
punches were produced by loops or scrolls of wire. By Hellenistic
times, combined punches and dies were in use.
In 1400 BC, the Egyptian Amarna period, resin
and mud for repoussé backing was in use. In 400 BC, the Greeks were
using Beeswax for filler in repoussé.
Repoussé and chasing are commonly used in
India to
create objects such as water vessels. These vessels are generally
made using sheets of copper or silver.
Methods
It can take some time to create jewelery using
Repoussé and chasing, although with practice, complex and delicate
pieces can be made which would be virtually impossible to complete
using any other method. It takes a lot of time due to the
repetition of a number of time-consuming stages: the preparation of
a sheet by annealing;
cleaning to remove the pitch
between annealing and work; setting up; and careful work with
punches. One method of repoussé and chasing is to place a thin
sheet of metal on a bowl of heated Pitch. The pitch is slightly
soft, and hardens when cooled, or becomes liquefied when heated.
The purpose of using pitch is to provide a solid base to work on,
whilst allowing the metal to be pushed out and shaped without
obstruction. The pitch is best worked on in a pitch bowl. This is a
cast
iron bowl which sits on a bag stuffed with sand or a similar substance. This
allows for greater stability, rotation and angling. The pitch
is heated using a hairdryer, or an industrial
blowdryer. If the pitch is too hard, the metal will be thinned. If
it is too soft, you have very little control over the form. Good
pitch is hard enough to hold its shape, but soft enough to yield.
Steel
tools are used to work the
metal. A "liner" is a steel rod with a very thin, slightly rounded
end, that is used to create the initial lines on the metal. The
liner is hit on the end with a chasing hammer, pushing a thin line
of metal into the pitch. The side facing up will consequently be
the front of the piece. Once all the lines have been chased, the
metal is then turned over on the pitch, and repoussé is then used
to push the metal so that it extrudes on the front of the finished
piece. The piece of metal is turned and worked many times, with
numerous tools, before the final design is achieved.
Once a fairly large shape is inverted, it can be filled in
with warm pitch to help maintain its shape. The pitch should be
allowed to set in the forms before the piece is placed back on the
pitch. Every time the metal is removed from the pitch bowl, it
needs to be cleaned and re-annealed. Turpentine is
used to remove the pitch, and a blow torch can also be used to burn
it off.
Tools
There are hundreds of tools which can be used.
They are generally made by the jeweller/crafts person. They are
typically made from bars of tool steel,
which is forged and
tempered at the tip. A
saw can be used to cut
designs into the tip for making patterns, or the tool can be
hammered onto a patterned surface, which will indent the tip. The
end of the tool which is to be hammered should be bevelled to allow
for expansion of the metal from repeated hammering. Some of the
main styles of tool include: Liners, planishers, matting, and
doming. Liners have thin tips, which are slightly rounded. If they
are too thin they will cut the metal. They are used in the initial
marking out of the design, and in the finishing stages to refine
any thin outlines. Planishers have smooth, flat tips which are used
for pushing out large, flat areas of metal. Matting tools have
patterns cut into them, and provide detail to areas of the design.
Matting tools can also be made by filing a thin line around a steel
bar, hardening it, then snapping it. This will result in a fine
grain pattern. Doming tools push out rounded areas of metal, and
can either be round or oval, quite pointed or almost flat. An
oxyacetylene torch
is required for heating the steel sufficiently for forging. The
more tools available, the easier it is to create a detailed,
accurate piece.
Recipes for pitch
The traditional working surface
is chaser's pitch which is usually a composition
combining three substances: pure pitch, a filler (or stiffener),
and an emollient
(softening medium). There are a number of different recipes for
making chaser's pitch. One example is:
- 16 parts pitch
- 20 parts plaster of Paris
- 4 parts resin
- 1 part tallow
The pitch is heated until molten. Plaster of
Paris is added a small amount at a time. Resin and tallow are then
mixed in.
For a non-toxic recipe, try: 1 part beex wax to 1
part plaster of paris.
See also
chasing in German: Treiben
chasing in French: Repoussé
chasing in Dutch: Ciseleren
chasing in Japanese: 彫金
chasing in Polish: Repusowanie
chasing in Slovak: Tepanie
chasing in Swedish:
Repoussering