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3. On the Chemistry of Japanese Lacquer
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 September 2014
Extract
The lacquer tree (Rhus vernicifera) is indigenous to Japan; it supplies a valuable timber, and its fruit yields vegetable wax, but it is chiefly cultivated on account of its juice–lacquer (Urushi)–which forms the basis of the famous Japanese varnishes. The juice is obtained by making incisions in the tree, and it is made into a varnish by simply stirring in the sun in order to drive off an excess of moisture. Different colours may be imparted to the varnish by the addition of various metals, oxides, and sulphides; and after it has been applied to an object it must be hardened by exposure to a moist atmosphere at a moderately high temperature.
- Type
- Proceedings 1184-85
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1886
References
note * page 175 For particulars as to the preparation and use of lacquer, see the essay in Forestry and Forest Products, Edinburgh, 1885, p. 515, of the chemical part of which this paper is an abstract.
note * page 176 Memoirs, Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society, 3rd ser., vol. vii. p. 249.
note * page 178 Analysed by Mr Hiraga.