Sunday, January 31, 2010

Sculpting Engraving And Cutting

By Whitaker Perrets

Do you ever notice a tombstone with many words on it and ask yourself how it was engraved? Have you ever been amazed by the spatial wonders of a sculpture and wondered how such a thing is possible? One of the most commonly used forms of sculpting and engraving is nothing less than laser cutting technology.

Throughout the nineteenth century, the ubiquitous form of sculpting, engraving, and crafting of many objects was the traditional welding method. This method was a process in which the raw materials would be heated until they were entirely melted into liquid and then would fill up vessels that would become their final shapes.

Engraving generally took place in the facility of a welder who would take the raw stone or metal and place it on a metal board. He would then take a chain-saw like machine and carve out letters and imprint them onto the metal or stone. This was the most common form of engraving.

However, an even earlier process of engraving existed, and that was none other than the classic chiseling method. One would take a metal or wooden pick (chisel) and would chip away at a stone or larger rock little by little.

This was a method that was also quite common for engraving of tombstones or of cornerstones of buildings that were made in the early nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

However, today a new form of engraving and crafting has developed due to advances in technology, namely laser cutting. Laser technology has swept the world of its feet and has provided for so many advances in the modern world. Take, for example, laser eye surgery and other cosmetic laser surgeries.

This laser technology has made its way to the world of sculpting, crafting, and engraving as well, creating one of the most easy to use forms of art creation available today.

As a matter of fact, many famous sculptors and artists across the world choose laser cutting as their choice tool for their artwork. This is because laser cutting is far superior to other methods previously mentioned with regards to precision and angles. Even plaque and tombstone engravings today are created with laser cutting technology.

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