enamelware$24663$ - перевод на греческий
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enamelware$24663$ - перевод на греческий

MATERIAL MADE BY FUSING POWDERED GLASS TO A SUBSTRATE BY FIRING
Enamelware; Enamelling; Vitreous Enamel; Porcelain Enamelling; Porcelain enamel; Enamelwork; Enamel Miniature; Enamel miniature; Enamelist; Enameling; Painted enamel; Enamel painting; Enamel (glass); Enameller
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  • DRU factory]], popular in the 1950s
  • The [[Dunstable Swan Jewel]], a [[livery]] badge in [[ronde bosse]] enamel, about 1400. British Museum
  • Chinese [[cloisonné]] enamel bronze wine pot, 18th century
  • Glass vials with ground vitreous enamel powder in different colors
  • moriage}} to slightly raise the design; [[Khalili Collection of Japanese Art]]
  • Old German enamel street sign
  • Meenakaari art from Iran
  • An [[agate]] mortar and pestle is used to finely grind vitreous enamel powder, mixed with a volatile oil, such as [[lavender oil]], to produce enamel paints for artistic work.
  • Medallion of the [[Death of the Virgin]], with basse-taille enamel, partly fallen away
  • Staffordshire Moorlands Pan, 2nd-century [[Roman Britain]]
  • painted Limoges enamel]] dish, mid-16th century, attributed to [[Jean de Court]]
  • Chinese]] dish with scalloped rim, from the [[Ming Dynasty]]; early 15th century; [[cloisonné]] enamel; height: 2.5 cm, diameter: 15.2 cm

enamelware      
n. εμαγιέ σκεύη

Определение

Enameling

Википедия

Vitreous enamel

Vitreous enamel, also called porcelain enamel, is a material made by fusing powdered glass to a substrate by firing, usually between 750 and 850 °C (1,380 and 1,560 °F). The powder melts, flows, and then hardens to a smooth, durable vitreous coating. The word vitreous comes from the Latin vitreus, meaning "glassy".

Enamel can be used on metal, glass, ceramics, stone, or any material that will withstand the fusing temperature. In technical terms fired enamelware is an integrated layered composite of glass and another material (or more glass). The term "enamel" is most often restricted to work on metal, which is the subject of this article. Essentially the same technique used with other bases is known by different terms: on glass as enamelled glass, or "painted glass", and on pottery it is called overglaze decoration, "overglaze enamels" or "enamelling". The craft is called "enamelling", the artists "enamellers" and the objects produced can be called "enamels".

Enamelling is an old and widely adopted technology, for most of its history mainly used in jewellery and decorative art. Since the 18th century, enamels have also been applied to many metal consumer objects, such as some cooking vessels, steel sinks, and cast-iron bathtubs. It has also been used on some appliances, such as dishwashers, laundry machines, and refrigerators, and on marker boards and signage.

The term "enamel" has also sometimes been applied to industrial materials other than vitreous enamel, such as enamel paint and the polymers coating enameled wire; these actually are very different in materials science terms.

The word enamel comes from the Old High German word smelzan (to smelt) via the Old French esmail, or from a Latin word smaltum, first found in a 9th-century Life of Leo IV. Used as a noun, "an enamel" is usually a small decorative object coated with enamel. "Enamelled" and "enamelling" are the preferred spellings in British English, while "enameled" and "enameling" are preferred in American English.