Shakudō
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Shakudō (赤銅) is a special kind of metal used in Japan. It is made by mixing gold and copper together, usually with about 4 to 10 percent gold and the rest copper. This metal belongs to a group called irogane, which includes colored metals.
Shakudō can be treated in a special way to give it a dark, almost black color. This dark color is created through a process called niiro.
Without this special treatment, shakudō looks similar to bronze. The dark color makes it look like lacquer, a shiny finish used on many beautiful objects in Japan.
Naming
The name shaku-dō means "red" and "copper". This material starts out looking like dark bronze and can be changed to a very dark, almost black color.
History
The word "shakudō" first appears in old Japanese records from the Nara period (710-794 AD), but it is not clear what it meant then. Real pieces made from shakudō exist from the 12th century and later. Historically, shakudō was used to make and decorate parts of Japanese swords, such as tsuba, as well as small ornaments, sliding door catches, and tiny boxes.
Shakudō was shown to people in the West in the middle of the 19th century. Before, people thought materials like shakudō were only used in China and Japan, maybe in other parts of Asia too. But newer studies found that similar decorative metals were used in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome.
Production
Shakudō has a long history. It began when Japan learned many techniques from Korea and China. During the Meiji period, people made shakudō by heating copper and adding fine gold, along with a by-product called shirome. Later, during the Edo period, they might have used a mix called nigurome instead of plain copper. After shaping the metal, they finished its surface using a special process. Today, the process is simpler and usually just uses copper and gold.
Use
Shakudō is made with expensive gold, so it was mostly used for small decorations or tiny items like tsuba. Bigger old objects, like vases, that people think are shakudō might not be real, especially if they don’t have the special blue-black shine. If shakudō is cleaned or polished, it won’t turn dark again on its own.
Today, artists use shakudō again to make beautiful jewelry, cups, and for a special craft called mokume-gane.
Shakudō is sometimes wrongly used to talk about any fancy metal decorations from Japan that are made by mixing different metals together. In the past, these were known in other countries as Amita damascene, after a company that made them to sell to other places. Amita damascene included shakudō, shibuichi, gold, silver, and bronze for decorations.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Shakudō, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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