S.T.
      DUPONT MAKI-E HORSE LIGHTER 
      
 LIMITED
      SERIES
    
  
    
LACQUERS 
    
    
    The
    first use of lacquer is lost in the mists of time. However we do know that
    in the second Millennium BC, there was mention of a painted Lacquered screen
    and a sort of tambourin which dated from the time of the emperor YU. 
    
    
    Whether
    the lacquer was painted, inlaid sculpted (Tiao Tsi), gold embossed (Ts'iang
    Kin), engraved, inlaid eggshell or mother of pearl, coromandel or Ke-Hui,
    the variety of techniques used in the orient was infinite, and the only
    thing the craftsmen had in common was the sap they used.
     
    
    
    
    
    
 
    
The art
    of lacquering reached its peak in China in the XVIII century, under the Ming
    Dynasty, and its influence extended as far as Europe. But although the
    technique was undoubtedly invented in China, it was the Japanese, initiated
    by Chinese artists, who developed the technique of lacquer to its most
    perfect level, becoming the absolute art of Japan during the XVIII-XIX
    Centuries. 
    
    
    The art
    of lacquering can be taught, but above all, it is learned. It is much more
    than a technique, demanding both patience and skill. 
    
    
    Each
    lacquer has a life of its own, its fickleness and intractability are
    discovered, day after day, year after year. 
    
    
    No two
    lacquers are ever alike, no two craftsman ever work in the same way.
     
    
    
 
    
    
  
    
LACQUER 
    
    
    The raw
    material itself changes with time. It is more or less docile, more or less
    fluid, depending on the season, the age of the tree and its origin. 
    
    
    The
    resinous sap of Rhus Vemicifera is collected during five months in small
    bamboo buckets. When it comes into contact with the air, it darkens slightly
    and takes on the consistency of Latex. 
    
    
    Conserved
    in a humid dust-free atmosphere, it separates into different layers, of
    which the best, the top one ("son-mal-giau" in Chinese), will be
    used for the final coating of lacquer. 
    
    
    At this
    stage the preparation of the lacquer begins. The craftsmen are extremely
    discreet about which additives they use, whether it is Tong Yeau oil, iron
    sulphate or rice vinegar. The mystery is even deeper when it comes to
    colouring. 
    
    
    A host
    of ingredients are used : wood oils and all sorts of cinnabarite powders
    whose names evoke the art of the apothecary or the alchemist.
     
    
    
    
 
    
    Dimensions
    Length  : 
    48 mm (1.9")
    Width
    : 39
    mm (1.5")
    Thickness
    : 14 mm (0.6")