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Casting Bronze with the Lost-Wax Method — Cire Perdue
Forge

Criado por

Forge

23. March 2026

Casting Bronze with the Lost-Wax Method — Cire Perdue

Cast a bronze object using the lost-wax (cire perdue) technique — one of the most sophisticated metalworking processes of the ancient world. A wax model is encased in clay, the wax is melted out to leave a hollow mould, and molten bronze is poured in to replicate every detail of the original. This method has been used since approximately 4500 BCE.

Advanced
2-3 days (including drying and cooling)

Instruções

1

Create the Wax Model

Sculpt the desired object in beeswax. Warm the wax to make it pliable — body heat or gentle warming near a fire is sufficient. For solid castings (small figurines, tools, jewellery), model the entire form in solid wax. For larger, hollow castings (vessels, large statues), first form a clay core in the approximate internal shape, allow it to dry, then apply a layer of wax over the core to the desired wall thickness. Add wax rods (sprues) to the model to create channels through which the bronze will flow in and air will escape. Position the sprues at the highest and thickest points of the model.

2

Build the Mould

Coat the wax model in successive layers of clay. The first layer (the investment or prime coat) must be very fine-grained clay mixed with water to a creamy consistency — this layer captures every detail of the wax surface. Apply it carefully, ensuring no air bubbles are trapped. Allow each coat to dry before applying the next. Build up the outer layers with progressively coarser clay mixed with sand and chopped straw for thermal shock resistance, to a total thickness of 2-4 cm. Leave the sprue channels open at the top. Allow the mould to dry completely — any trapped moisture will flash to steam during casting and destroy the mould.

Step 2 - Image 1
3

Burn Out the Wax

Place the dried mould upside down in a fire or kiln and heat it gradually to approximately 500-700 degrees C. The wax melts and drains out through the sprue openings (hence 'lost wax'), leaving a precise negative cavity between the clay core and the outer mould wall. At higher temperatures, any remaining wax residue burns away completely. The heating also fires the clay mould into a hard ceramic that can withstand the thermal shock of receiving molten bronze. After firing, inspect the sprue openings for blockages and clear them with a thin wire or reed.

4

Melt and Pour the Bronze

Melt the bronze alloy (typically 90 percent copper, 10 percent tin) in a clay crucible using a charcoal-fired furnace with forced air from bellows. Bronze melts at approximately 950 degrees C — lower than pure copper due to the tin content. The molten bronze should be a bright orange-red liquid. Pre-heat the mould by placing it near the furnace to prevent thermal shock cracking when the hot metal enters. When the bronze is fully liquid, remove the crucible with tongs and pour the metal steadily into the sprue opening. Pour in a single, continuous stream — interrupted pours create cold joints where the metal does not fuse properly.

Step 4 - Image 1
5

Break the Mould and Finish

Allow the mould to cool completely — this takes several hours for thick castings. Break away the outer clay mould with a hammer to reveal the bronze casting inside. Remove the inner clay core by breaking it up and pulling the fragments out through any openings. Cut off the sprue channels with a bronze saw or chisel. File, grind, and polish the surface to remove mould lines, sprue stubs, and any casting defects. Small holes (porosity) can be filled by hammering in small pieces of bronze. The finished casting reproduces every surface detail of the original wax model with remarkable fidelity — lost-wax casting remains the preferred method for fine art bronzes to this day.

Materiais

  • Beeswax - enough to model the object pieceReferência
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  • Fine clay (for investment mould) - several kg pieceReferência
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  • Coarse clay mixed with sand and straw (outer mould) - several kg piece
  • Bronze (copper-tin alloy, approx 90% copper, 10% tin) - enough to fill the mould pieceReferência
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  • Charcoal (for melting bronze) - 5-10 kg pieceReferência
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Ferramentas necessárias

  • Clay crucible (for melting bronze)Referência
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  • BellowsReferência
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  • Tongs (for handling crucible)Referência
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  • Modelling tools (bone or wood)

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