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  2. Tunbridge ware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunbridge_ware

    Shaped rods and slivers of wood were first carefully glued together, then cut into many thin slices of identical pictorial veneer with a fine saw. Elaborately striped and feathered bandings for framing were pre-formed in a similar fashion. There is a collection of Tunbridge ware in the Tunbridge Wells Museum and Art Gallery in Tunbridge Wells. [1]

  3. Khatam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Khatam

    Designing of inlaid articles is a highly elaborate process. There are sometimes more than 400 pieces per square inch in a work of average quality. [2] Thin rods of different coloured woods, ivory, bone, brass, silver, etc. were glued together into long bunches that could have a round, rectangular, or polygonal cross-section. [3]

  4. Raden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raden

    Shibayama-style writing box, Nagasaki, 1800–1850, wood covered with black lacquer and inlaid with flowers in under-painted mother-of-pearl shell. Inlaid maki-e raden paper box with "wheels in flow" (katawaguruma) design, National Treasure, Heian period, 11–12th century, Tokyo National Museum Inlaid maki-e raden writing box with "Eight Bridges" (Yatsuhashi) design, by Ogata Kōrin, National ...

  5. Inlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inlay

    Inlay (ivory, red sandalwood, copper) on wooden casket. In a wood matrix, inlays commonly use wood veneers, but other materials like shells, mother-of-pearl, horn or ivory may also be used. Pietre dure, or coloured stones inlaid in white or black marbles, and inlays of precious metals in a base metal matrix, are other forms of inlay. Master ...

  6. Intarsia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intarsia

    Geometric figure (1537), intarsia by fra Damiano da Bergamo; Museum of the Basilica of Saint Dominic, Bologna, Italy Intarsia on the First aid kit of Alexander Karađorđević, Prince of Serbia, Historical Museum of Serbia. Intarsia is a form of originally Arab wood inlaying that is similar to marquetry. The start of the practice dates from ...

  7. Marquetry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marquetry

    Although marquetry is a technique separate from inlay, English marquetry-makers were called "inlayers" throughout the 18th century. In Paris, before 1789, makers of veneered or marquetry furniture (ébénistes) belonged to a separate guild from chair-makers and other furniture craftsmen working in solid wood (menuisiers).

  8. Mysore Rosewood Inlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mysore_Rosewood_Inlay

    inlaid wood carving, Lalitha Mahal Palace Hotel. Mysore Rosewood Inlay covers a range of techniques used by artisans in around the area of Mysore in sculpture and the decorative for inserting pieces of contrasting, often coloured materials like ivory shells, mother-of-pearl, horn and sandalwood into depressions in a rosewood object to form ornament or pictures that normally are flush with the ...

  9. Certosina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Certosina

    Similar to marquetry, it uses small pieces of wood, bone, ivory, metal, or mother-of-pearl to create inlaid geometric patterns on a wood base. [1] The term comes from Carthusian monasteries (Certosa in Italian, Charterhouse in English), [2] probably the Certosa di Pavia, where the technique was used in ornamenting an altarpiece by the Embriachi ...