Pilot Namiki Yukari Maki-e Fountain Pen - Flower Fence.Namiki YukariFlower Fence depicts flowers and greenery overhanging a fence with gold powder and precise red and green lacquer detailing over a black urushi lacquer background.Namiki YukariFlower Fence
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Pilot Namiki Yukari Maki-e Fountain Pen – Flower Fence.
Namiki YukariFlower Fence depicts flowers and greenery overhanging a fence with gold powder and precise red and green lacquer detailing over a black urushi lacquer background.
Namiki YukariFlower Fence was made withthe Togidashi-Hira Maki-e technique (Burnished-Flat Maki-e). First, Togidashi Maki-e (Burnished Maki-e) is used:after the background and scenery are painted with lacquer, gold or silver powder is sprinkled over it and it is sealed withUrushi lacquer. After drying, the surface is lightly burnished with charcoal, revealing the design underneath. Then, Hira-Maki-e (Flat Maki-e) is usedtorender the main design through layers of metal powder and lacquer.Herb Decorationwascreated by a group of artisans known as “Kokkokai,”formed in 1931 around maki-e artist Gonroku Matsuda.
Namiki’s Yukari Collection illustrates natural imagery of the four seasons through various techniques, often in combination, includingTogidashi Maki-e, or burnished-raised maki-e, and Raden.The making of a Maki-e piece is an extremely labor- and time-intensive process involving a repetitive series of applying layers of lacquer, drawing the design outline, sprinkling gold and silver powders to fill in the designs, and polishing to achieve a lustrous surface. The lacquered main design is filled in with the carefully sprinkled gold and silver powders, and then several additional layers of lacquer are applied. Once these layers harden, the surface is polished many times.A finished product can take up to 3 months, and some of the pieces go through the repetitive lacquer-drawing-sprinkling-polishing process up to 130 times.
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