To Render Shrunken Wooden Casks Watertight.
CASSIUS, PURPLE OF: See Gold.
CASKET TRIMMINGS: See Castings.
CASTS (PLASTER), PRESERVATION OF: See Plaster.
CASTS, REPAIRING OF BROKEN: See Adhesives and Lutes.
CASTS FROM WAX MODELS: See Modeling.
CASTING
Castings Out Of Various Metals.
The French bronzes, which are imitations, are cast in copper or brass molds. The material used is principally zinc and tin, and an unlimited number of castings can be made in the mold, but if a real bronze piece is to be produced it must be out of copper and the mold made in sand. To make the castings hollow, with sand, a core is required. This fills the inside of the figure so that the molten copper runs around it, and as the core is made out of sand, the same can be afterwards washed out. If the casting is to be hollow and is to be cast in a metal mold, then the process is very simple. The mold is filled with molten metal, and when the operator thinks the desired thickness has cooled next to the walls, he pours out the balance. An experienced man can make hollow castings in this way, and make the walls of any thickness.
Casket hardware trimmings, which are so extensively used on coffins, especially the handles, are nearly all cast out of tin and antimony, and in brass molds. The metal used is brittle, and requires strengthening at the weak portions, and this is mostly done with wood filling or with iron rods, which are secured in the molds before the metal is poured in.