Information AboutVitreous Enamel |
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Also, an "enamel" is a decorative object, usually very small, having an enamel coating, such as a piece of champlevé or cloisonné. Vitreous enamel has many excellent properties: it is smooth, hard, chemically resistant, durable, can take on long-lasting, brilliant colors, and cannot burn. Disadvantages are its tendency to crack or shatter when the substrate is stressed or bent. The durability of enamel has given it many functional applications, including: early 20th Century Advertising signs, interior walls of Oven s, speckleware Cooking Pot s, exterior walls of high quality Kitchen Appliance s, Cast Iron Bathtub s, Storage Silo s on Farm s and process equipment such as chemical reactors and tanks for the chemical and pharmaceutical process industries. Enamelling is an old and widely-adopted technology. The Ancient Egypt ians applied enamels to pottery and stone objects. Other practitioners include the Ancient Greeks , Celt s, Russia ns, and the Chinese . The bright, jewel-like colors have also made enamel a favored choice for designers of jewelry and bibelots, such as ancient beads, the fantastic eggs of Peter Carl Fabergé , enameled copper boxes of Battersea Enamel lers, and artists such as George Stubbs and other painters of Portrait Miniature s. Enameling was a favorite technique of the Art Nouveau jewellers. According to some sources, the word ''enamel'' comes from the High German word ''smelzan'' (to Smelt ) via the Old French ''esmail''. Some techniques of enameling:
Color in enamel is obtained by the addition of various minerals, often metal oxides Cobalt , Praseodymium , Iron , or Neodymium . The last creates delicate shades ranging from pure violet through wine-red and warm gray. Enamel can be either transparent, opaque or opalescent (translucent), which is a variety that gains a milky opacity the longer it is fired. Different enamel colours cannot be mixed to make a new colour, in the manner of paint. This produces tiny specks of both colours; although the eye can be tricked by grinding colors together to an extremely fine, flour-like, powder. "ENAMEL" PAINT Some paints are called " Enamel Paint s". This is a commonly used, yet fanciful term, implying that an ordinary latex or oil-based Paint has the same properties as true, fired enamel. Bicycle Frame s and similar steel objects are traditionally stove enamelled in countries such as the UK. The paint is baked on but the temperatures are much lower than for true vitreous enamel - approximately 200 degrees Celsius. The process should not be confused with Powder Coating as the enamel paint is sprayed on "wet". SEE ALSO
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