| I was
approached by Alistair Roper of Sun International to show him some of
my work with a view to me doing the trophies for the Nedbank Million
Dollar Golf Tournament. I sat up late at night working on three
lionesses - one landing, one running and one taking off. I caught the
plane from Harare to Jo'burg with my three lions in my suitcase ready
to meet with Alistair only to be told that he wanted a male lion. So I
caught the plane back and started again... |
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Origination
This is the
origination model which was approved, and I set about making
'Mhondoro'. |
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Silicon Rubber
Mould
After
approval, I made a two piece mould and plaster jacket. Five years
ago,
my moulds were so poor due to lack of knowledge and experience that I
would end up spending two days on each wax and the moulds, just tidying
them up. Time has taught me that concentrating on the
quality of the
mould will result in minimal attention on the wax models
themselves. |

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Making of the
Wax Model
I
use a succession of chip frying pans to melt the wax before
poring it
into the mould. I then roll it around and tip the excess
out. I do
this three times to make a hollow wax model. The picture shows
Amos
pouring the wax.
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Attaching of
Sprues
On completion
of the wax model, sprues need to be attached. This is an art in
itself. Every founder has a different method. The fat rods
allow the
bronze to feed the model and the thin ones allow the gases to
escape.
Trial, error and a lot of 'short runs' later - my sprues always allow
the bronze to go somewhere - there are no dead ends. A patch from
the
side of the lion is removed so that the slurry can coat the inside as
well as the outside. The patch is sprued to the side of the
tail so
it can be made along with the rest of the lion and attached by welding
at the end of the process.
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Making the
Ceramic Mould
Dipping into
colloidal silica slurry - the secret here is not too thick and not too
thin and sprinkle with silica sand. The picture shows Amos
dipping the
mould. |
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The Ceramic
Mould with Wax still inside
Nine coats later
produces a ceramic shell sufficiently thick to withhold the
molten bronze. |

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Burning out of
the Wax
This is the
melting away of the wax. This must be a hot and quick
process. A New
Zealand friend of mine holds the shell in one hand and the gas torch in
the other – this entails too much risk of being burned, so I prefer an
oil drum and a large gas torch - a lot safer! |
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Empty Ceramic
Shell
Once all the
wax is burned out, you have an empty shell. The ceramic shell now
has
a void where the wax was and thus this method of casting is known as
the 'lost wax technique'. |

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Melting the
Bronze
The bronze is
melted in a crucible in the centre of a coke furnace. Gas,
paraffin,
diesel or induction furnaces can also be used. |
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Pouring the
Bronze
This is
always exciting no matter how many times you do it. The
orange-red
molten metal in the crucible is lifted from the furnace and put in the
basket and then poured into the shells, which are bedded firmly into
sand. If the bronze keeps pouring and the mould does not
fill up -
panic, you have a crack! The bronze is running out into the sand. |

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Mould Removal
Now the
boring bit - removing the ceramic mould from the cooled
bronze. This
is done by painstakingly removing the ceramic with a hammer and chisel
and must be done without marking the bronze. |
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Sprue Removal
The sprues
need to be removed. This is done by carefully using an
angle grinder
ensuring no flat edges are left behind. Final touch ups include
fettling with air tools, small tips, wire brushes and sand blasting. |

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Welding
The clean
bronze is now welded to close any holes (intentionally there for the
drying process when making a ceramic mould). The patch on the
side is
replaced and the lion welded to the base. Again, fettling is done
on
the newly welded areas. |
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Patenating
The finished
bronze is wire brushed and patenated with acid to give it the desired
colour. |

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The Finished
Bronze
The bronze is
polished, then attached to a wooden base and named..
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