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SHOP Rustic Lacquer Bowl
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Rustic Lacquer Bowl

$30.00

Antique turned-wood bowl from Japan, with cinnabar-red lacquer applied to the interior. Lacquer is derived from the sap of the lacquer- and wax trees (genus Toxicodendron), native to China, Korea and Japan. Their sap contains the compound urushiol (from the plant’s Japanese name, urushi); this is the same compound found in poison oak and poison ivy in North America. The complex technique of coating wooden (and other) objects with lacquer developed in Japan and China as early as 8000 years ago. Lacquerware is extremely durable, and impervious to most liquids. Un-pigmented, it is a dark brown, but most lacquerware is colored black or red with iron pigments. Interior lacquer shows some blistering, but remains intact.

8” x 6”

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Antique turned-wood bowl from Japan, with cinnabar-red lacquer applied to the interior. Lacquer is derived from the sap of the lacquer- and wax trees (genus Toxicodendron), native to China, Korea and Japan. Their sap contains the compound urushiol (from the plant’s Japanese name, urushi); this is the same compound found in poison oak and poison ivy in North America. The complex technique of coating wooden (and other) objects with lacquer developed in Japan and China as early as 8000 years ago. Lacquerware is extremely durable, and impervious to most liquids. Un-pigmented, it is a dark brown, but most lacquerware is colored black or red with iron pigments. Interior lacquer shows some blistering, but remains intact.

8” x 6”

Antique turned-wood bowl from Japan, with cinnabar-red lacquer applied to the interior. Lacquer is derived from the sap of the lacquer- and wax trees (genus Toxicodendron), native to China, Korea and Japan. Their sap contains the compound urushiol (from the plant’s Japanese name, urushi); this is the same compound found in poison oak and poison ivy in North America. The complex technique of coating wooden (and other) objects with lacquer developed in Japan and China as early as 8000 years ago. Lacquerware is extremely durable, and impervious to most liquids. Un-pigmented, it is a dark brown, but most lacquerware is colored black or red with iron pigments. Interior lacquer shows some blistering, but remains intact.

8” x 6”

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