Very beautiful and delicate crafting. The spirit of Kintsugi becomes even more apparent when we are allowed to see the meticulous and patient work. I am grateful for the art you have shared.
@@kintsugijapanlivestreaming8247 yes, it was unclear if florence meant cleaning during the making, or for afterwards. The turpentine oil is for cleaning after the process is complete, I assume. The silk ball, for cleaning as you complete the Kitsugi process.
@@kintsugijapanlivestreaming8247 this is so beautiful to watch! I am wondering why you use wheat flour in the initial bonding, and tonoko in the second step to reinforce and fill cracks/chips. Why do you need both mixtures? What different properties do each bring?
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Very beautiful and delicate crafting.
The spirit of Kintsugi becomes even more apparent when we are allowed to see the meticulous and patient work.
I am grateful for the art you have shared.
Beautiful work ,beautiful hands
I feel like Ive stumbled across the job I always should have had.
Could this same process be used on stone or gemstones instead of ceramics?
are the materials available to buy online?
Yes.
Please link if possible. 💙
you clean just with a soft paper?
I use a silk ball.
I use a tissue with turpentine oil to clean.
@@kintsugijapanlivestreaming8247 yes, it was unclear if florence meant cleaning during the making, or for afterwards. The turpentine oil is for cleaning after the process is complete, I assume. The silk ball, for cleaning as you complete the Kitsugi process.
what do you mix to create the Rust Lacquer?
I mix the Tonoko powder and water and the Urushi.
Puede decirnos los materiales? Gracias
Utilizo principalmente Urushi laca.
Simple amazing.
Thank you!
Beautiful
Thanks!
I kinda preferred the look when it was black
What did you mix to create the second mixture you made? The one that filled in the larger missing gaps?
I mix Tonoko and water and Urushi . Tonoko is a polishing powder from polishing stone.
@@kintsugijapanlivestreaming8247 this is so beautiful to watch! I am wondering why you use wheat flour in the initial bonding, and tonoko in the second step to reinforce and fill cracks/chips. Why do you need both mixtures? What different properties do each bring?