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Egyptian Antiquities :
Egyptian Beaded Necklaces : Egyptian Faience Bead Necklace
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Egyptian Faience Bead Necklace - SB.0412
Origin: Sinai, Egypt
Circa: 1900
BC
to 1300
BC
Medium: Faience
$1,480.00
Location: United States
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| Description |
Most Ancient Egyptian beads were made of
faience, a glass-composite glaze which was
introduced as early as the Pre-Dynastic period.
According to Egyptologists, such beads were
made on an axis, probably of thread, which
would burn up during firing, leaving a hole. Disc,
ring and tubular beads were made by coating the
axis with the unfired body-paste, rolling the
cylinder to an even diameter on a flat surface,
and then scoring it with a knife into sections of
the desired length. Other shapes, such as ball
beads, were rolled between the hands and
perforated while still wet with a stiff point such
as a wire needle. The beads were then dried,
coated with glaze (if the glaze had not already
been mixed with the paste), and fired. The firing
process often gave the beads a beautiful
translucent quality. The majority of faience beads
are blue or green in color, but black, red, yellow
and white ones were also produced, especially in
the New Egyptian Kingdom.
- (SB.0412)
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