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Kintsugi, The Japanese Art of Fixing Broken Pottery With Gold

By Creativevisualart @creativevisart
Kintsugi, The Japanese Art of Fixing Broken Pottery With Gold Kintsugi, The Japanese Art of Fixing Broken Pottery With Gold

Kintsugi-1[13] Kintsugi-2[3] Kintsugi-4[3] Kintsugi-5[3] Kintsugi-8[2]

Many people replace or repair broken things in such a way that you might think the break never occurred. The Japanese art of Kintsugi is the antithesis of this. Rather than disguising the breakage, kintsugi restores the broken item incorporating the damage into the aesthetic of the restored item, making it part of the object’s history. Kintsugi uses lacquer resin mixed with powdered gold, silver, platinum, copper or bronze, resulting into something more beautiful than the original.

Kintsugi is said to have originated in the 15th century when a Japanese shogun broke a favorite tea bowl and sent it back to China to be fixed. But the repair job, which was done with metal staples – being the standard for repair at that time – detracted from the beauty of the bowl. Disappointed, the shogun enlisted a Japanese craftsmen to come up with a more aesthetically pleasing solution, and kintsugi was born.

via Wikipedia, Lakeside Pottery, Reddit, AmusingPlanet


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