Repaired bowl

Patch repaired bowl with Chinese decoration

When damaged, some ceramics items tend to be discarded, but others are not. Some items are kept because they are considered to be of practical or monetary value, or both. Some have carried religious significance to different cultures. There has often been a desire to be able to keep using them.

Missing or broken sections might often be replaced. In the past shellac, plaster, clay and even sections of other items were used. Waxes, shellac, natural gums including garlic, mulberry and tree sap have been used; as well as gelatine and isinglass, egg whites, glutinous rice and even boiled Gloucester cheese with quicklime!

Lacquer was often used and then covered with gold powder, making no attempt to hide the repair. Wire, rivets or dowels have also been used to hold broken pieces together but they can corrode, stain or damage the ceramic.

Modern adhesives for ceramics include epoxy resins, polyesters, acrylics, cyanoacrylics and UV hardening resins. They are chosen to suite the material, while their light transmitting properties are assessed to make joins as invisible as possible. Damages are recorded so that the history of the piece is known before the losses are integrated and disguised by painting or airbrushing.

Did you know?

The first recorded ceramic repair dates from around 7,000 BC.


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