Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Chip_carving> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 triples per page.
- Chip_carving abstract "Chip carving or chip-carving, kerbschnitt in German, is a style of carving in which knives or chisels are used to remove small chips of the material from a flat surface in a single piece. The style became important in Migration Period metalwork, mainly Animal style jewellery, where the faceted surfaces created caught the light to give a glinting appearance. This was very probably a transfer to metalworking of a technique already used in woodcarving, but no wooden examples have survived. Famous Anglo-Saxon examples include the jewellery from Sutton Hoo and the Tassilo Chalice, though the style originated in mainland Europe. In later British and Irish metalwork, the same style was imitated using casting, which is often called imitation chip-carving, or sometimes just chip carving (authors are not always careful to distinguish the two), a term also sometimes applied to pottery decorated in a similar way.".
- Chip_carving thumbnail ChipCarving.JPG?width=300.
- Chip_carving wikiPageExternalLink www.chipchats.org.
- Chip_carving wikiPageID "44988".
- Chip_carving wikiPageLength "1798".
- Chip_carving wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Chip_carving wikiPageRevisionID "591062888".
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Saxons.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Animal_style.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Cabinetry.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Caryocar_nuciferum.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Casting.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Category:Carving.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewellery_making.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Category:Woodcarving.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Chisel.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Folk_art.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Geometry.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Knife.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Mahogany.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Migration_Period_art.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Pine.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Pottery.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Sutton_Hoo.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Tassilo_Chalice.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Tilia.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Whittling.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Wood_carving.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink Workbench.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLink File:ChipCarving.JPG.
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLinkText "Chip carving".
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLinkText "chip carving".
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLinkText "chip form of ornament".
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLinkText "chip".
- Chip_carving wikiPageWikiLinkText "chip-carved".
- Chip_carving wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Decorative-art-stub.
- Chip_carving wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Decorative_arts.
- Chip_carving wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Sculpture-stub.
- Chip_carving wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Woodworking.
- Chip_carving wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Woodworking-stub.
- Chip_carving subject Category:Carving.
- Chip_carving subject Category:Jewellery_making.
- Chip_carving subject Category:Woodcarving.
- Chip_carving hypernym Style.
- Chip_carving type Art.
- Chip_carving comment "Chip carving or chip-carving, kerbschnitt in German, is a style of carving in which knives or chisels are used to remove small chips of the material from a flat surface in a single piece. The style became important in Migration Period metalwork, mainly Animal style jewellery, where the faceted surfaces created caught the light to give a glinting appearance. This was very probably a transfer to metalworking of a technique already used in woodcarving, but no wooden examples have survived.".
- Chip_carving label "Chip carving".
- Chip_carving sameAs Q1739210.
- Chip_carving sameAs Kerbschnitt.
- Chip_carving sameAs Karveskurd.
- Chip_carving sameAs m.0c7xc.
- Chip_carving sameAs Karvsnitt.
- Chip_carving sameAs Q1739210.
- Chip_carving wasDerivedFrom Chip_carving?oldid=591062888.
- Chip_carving depiction ChipCarving.JPG.
- Chip_carving isPrimaryTopicOf Chip_carving.