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Bala Cynwyd, Pa.Chinese seal is a seal or stamp containing Chinese characters used in East Asia to prove identity on documents, contracts, art, or similar items where authorship is considered important.East Asia currently uses a mixture of seals and hand signatures, and increasingly, electronic signatures.Types of Seals
2 Seals used by government authorities
3 Personal seals
3.Chinese characters in red ink, sometimes referred to as yang seals.Great Seals of Western countries.The most important of these seals is the Heirloom Seal, which was created by the first Emperor of China, Qin Shihuang, and was seen as a legitimising device embodying or symbolising the Mandate of Heaven.Used in ancient times on letters as a protective charm on letters to ward off wild beasts and demons of the recipient.These are more or less rectangular in shape.States aliases that the user uses.Has poems or proverbs inscribed, used on paintings, etc.Silk: The red paste is made from finely pulverized cinnabar, mixed with castor oil and silk strands.The silk strands bind the mixture together to form a very thick substance.It has a very oily appearance and tends to be a bright red in colour.Plant: The red paste is made from finely pulverized cinnabar, mixed with castor oil and moxa punk.Because the base is a plant one that has been pulverised, the texture is very loose due to the fact that it doesn't bind.The appearance is sponge like and not oily and tends to be a darker shade of red.Plant based paste tends to dry more quickly than silk based pastes because the plant extract does not hold onto the oil as tightly as silk.Also, plant pastes tend to smudge more easily than silk pastes due to the loose binding agent.When the seal is pressed onto the printing surface, the procedure differs according to plant or silk based paste.Chinese usage
Most people in China possess a personal name seal.Today, personal identification is often by a hand signature accompanied by a seal imprint.Seals can serve as identification with signatures because they are difficult to forge (when compared to forging a signature) and only the owner has access to his own seal.Seals are also often used on Chinese calligraphy works and Chinese paintings, usually imprinted in such works in the order (from top to bottom) of name seal, leisure seal(s), then studio seal.Owners or collectors of paintings or books will often add their own studio seals to pieces they have collected.Provided that it is tastefully done (for example, not obscuring the body of the painting), this practice does not devalue the painting.As a novelty souvenir, seal carvers also ply tourist business at Chinatowns and tourist destinations in China.Though such seals can be functional, they are typically nothing more than curios.The seals are kept in a constant environment, especially seals made of sandalwood or black ox horn.More important seals, such as authority and society seals are encased or wrapped in a silk cloth to add more protection.Inkan for standard Japanese names may be purchased prefabricated.Traditionally, inkan are engraved on the end of a stick of hard wood, bone, or ivory, with a diameter between 25 and 75 mm.The first evidence of writing in Japan is a hanko dating from AD 57, made of solid gold and belonging to the Emperor.Noblemen began using their own personal hanko after 750, and samurai began using them sometime in the Middle Ages.Samurai were permitted exclusive use of red ink.After modernization began in 1870, hanko finally came into general use throughout Japanese society.Korean usage
The seal was first introduced to Korea in approximately 2nd century BCE.The use of seals became popular in Three Kingdoms period.This was used only in communications with China and coronation of kings.In modern Korea, the use of seals is still common.Most Koreans have personal seals, every government agency and commercial corporation has its own seals to use in public documents.Korean) which is required documents for most of significant business transactions and civil services.Korean seals are made of wood, jade, or sometimes ivory for more value.Rare cases of bronze or steel seals are remaining.Cai Xiaoli and Young, Dawn; The Complete Oriental Painting Course: A structured, practical guide to painting skills and techniques of China and the Far East.This page was last modified on 15 February 2008, at 21:06.All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.
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