Egyptian Handmade Perfume Bottles
Blown glass, a very ancient technique, is the oldest among the handicrafts. It is said by some, that ancient Egyptians were the original inventors of glass making techniques. Production of metallurgy and faience helped a great deal in the manufacture of glass afterwards. The earliest Egyptian glass known to us was in the form of small beads and pendants found in sites dating back to the 3rd millennium B.C. At that time glass was made by melting a combination of silica-sand, lime, and soda. The interaction of the heated soda and the hot sand formed a transparent flowing liquid, which was then permitted to cool forming glass.
The first glass vessels appeared in Egypt in the middle of the 2nd millennium B.C. These were made by the technique of molding on a core made of mud and sand to form the shape of the vessel's interior. Then the core was submerged into viscous molten glass. Once the vessel was cold, the core had to be scraped out.
At that time, glass was regarded, as an artificial semi-precious stone and it was a costly novelty material, most likely the aristocracy owned no glass workshops since it was a royal monopoly.
The decline of royal power after the end of the New Kingdom put a stop to glass production for a time. Not till the Greco-Roman Period did new Egyptian glass centers arise in the Hellenistic cities of Alexandria and Naucratis.
The revolutionary invention of glass-blowing took place, probably in Syria, during the 1st century BC, though the technique did not reach Alexandria until the latter half of the following century when it was introduced by the Romans. The new discovery widely increased production and glass then ceased to be either a rarity or an upper-class prerogative.
Blown glass vessels were created by sticking a piece of molten glass onto one end of a blowpipe and through the other end introducing pressurized air into the pipe. This was done by mouth blowing. At that stage, the art of transformation into attractive shapes began. It was then cut with a copper wheel and ground with emery powder. After the vessel took its shape, decorations were added by pinching the hot glass, adding handles or other features to it, changing simple straight patterns into more intricate ones. After the coloring and hand painting process was completed, the bottles were put into a furnace with a very high temperature to set the color on the glass so that it is permanent. Afterwards, the bottles needed to be left out to cool. Then they were ready.
Nowadays, blown glass products are still made the same way our ancient ancestors used to make them. No extras are used but the very primitive tools used 7000 years ago and the golden fingers of the Egyptian craftsmen.
A. Basel
http://WWW.bazaarway.com
Latest News
Dr. Thomas Baldino Appointed Interim Dean of College of Arts ... Wilkes University, PA - Thomas Baldino has been appointed Interim Dean of the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Science. Effective January 10, he replaces Darin Fields who ... American Academy of Arts and Sciences Launches Humanities ... |
Johannes von Moltke to launch Center for the Humanities Faculty ... News from Washington University in St. Louis, MO - Von Moltke — the first of six speakers appearing for the Center for the Humanities this spring — was invited to campus by 2009 Faculty Fellow Jennifer ... |
Habitat for Humanity's ReStore site of food drive West Fargo Pioneer, ND - The Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore, a building supply thrift store located in Moorhead, is kicking off a month long food drive to benefit the local food ... |
Jackson Library To Present "Abraham Lincoln Man Of Sorrow" Jakson Time, NJ - ... offered through the Horizons Speakers Bureau of the New Jersey Council of the Humanities, a state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities. ... Lincoln, without the varnish |
The Express Times - LehighValleyLive.com | Northampton Community College awarded $800000 grant to create ... The Express Times - LehighValleyLive.com, PA - It has been awarded an $800000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities to ensure Northampton and Monroe county residents can study aspects of ... NCC receives $800K grant for Pocono and Bethlehem programs Northampton Community College grant to further history studies Grant for $800000 challenges Northampton Community College to ... |
New leader tapped for humanities council Las Vegas Review - Journal, NV - The organization is one of 56 state and territorial councils affiliated with the National Endowment for the Humanities, creating and supporting humanities ... |
![]() Daily Guide | UCC to begin distance learning courses in natural sciences/humanities Modern Ghana, Ghana - ... on Thursday announced that plans were far advanced to introduce distance learning programmes in the natural sciences and humanities. ... UCC to introduce more courses … in distance learning programme Many Ghanaians are embracing ‘Distance Education’, says university don |
![]() Inside Higher Ed | Unlikely Haven for Humanities Publishing Inside Higher Ed, DC - The University of Houston-Victoria is an unlikely hot spot for experimental fiction and the humanities. But this 3200-student institution has, ... |
USU names interim theater department head Salt Lake Tribune, United States - Yolanda Flores Niemann, dean of USU's Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences college, asked Jessop to assume the additional duties, as Colin Johnson, ... |
Division of Arts and Humanities offers up a 3 in 1 Penn State Altoona, United States - ALTOONA – Shorts, an evening of one-act plays produced entirely by Penn State Altoona students, kicks off Thursday, February 5, 2009 in the Paul R. and ... |
Resources
-
Sorry Currently Unavailable

