This work is truly beautiful. Copper vessel and turquoise stone. It looks like jewelry. The turquoise vessel is exquisitely carved. A skilled master at work.
I like the result very much. When you call it tutorial, your viewers expect you to name the things you are using, like the sort of glue or the grinding equipment.
I partly agree about the tutorial but, it can be very difficult to fully describe artisans' materials in terms that translate well to other country's supply and naming differences. Having said that, I recognise much of what was used here. The glue is 2 part epoxy bonding resin (very different from glass fibre laminating resin), it's a 2 parts resin (with black pigment added) to 1 part hardener. It was thinned either with acetone, or denatured alcohol. It's important to select an epoxy system that will cure slow enough for the solvent to fully evaporate before curing. The abrasives were nothing special, the thinned epoxy and turquoise aren't hard or strong. The only unusual part was the solid lump. I'm guessing that that was just a lump of iron. A suitably hard rock would work as well. Looks like a great process. If you have patience to select and place each stone.
This work is truly beautiful. Copper vessel and turquoise stone. It looks like jewelry. The turquoise vessel is exquisitely carved. A skilled master at work.
Thank you very much!❤❤
Das ist super schön... 🍀🍀👍👍
Ja, das stimmt. Die Arbeit dieses Meisters ist ausgezeichnet. Danke schön.🌹🌹🌹
Truly magical, wishing you great success on the business side of it .
Thank you, dear friend. You have raised a very important and sweet point.🙏🙏❤❤😊
Unbelievable 😮😮. Beautiful 😍 🤩
Many many thanks
So beautiful. 🎉🎉 thanks for sharing
❤❤
Enjoy your journey through history.❤️❤️
You are absolutely right. Excellent.❤❤❤❤
Loved this one 😍
Nice.
And every stone selected and placed individually!
Wowi Zowie!!! So beautiful
Bravo à vous, c’est magnifique
beautiful work
this is work truly beautiful....
💯👍😎💯
How to polish copper
its look gold and shiny ?
😍😍
Why not use lapus??
Iran has so much lapis
I like the result very much. When you call it tutorial, your viewers expect you to name the things you are using, like the sort of glue or the grinding equipment.
I partly agree about the tutorial but, it can be very difficult to fully describe artisans' materials in terms that translate well to other country's supply and naming differences.
Having said that, I recognise much of what was used here.
The glue is 2 part epoxy bonding resin (very different from glass fibre laminating resin), it's a 2 parts resin (with black pigment added) to 1 part hardener.
It was thinned either with acetone, or denatured alcohol.
It's important to select an epoxy system that will cure slow enough for the solvent to fully evaporate before curing.
The abrasives were nothing special, the thinned epoxy and turquoise aren't hard or strong. The only unusual part was the solid lump. I'm guessing that that was just a lump of iron. A suitably hard rock would work as well.
Looks like a great process. If you have patience to select and place each stone.
Ustam makinaya çekiçle vurulmaz çok kötü bir örnek