Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What did the carved Niang of Qing Dynasty look like and in what historical period?

What did the carved Niang of Qing Dynasty look like and in what historical period?

San Qian's carving marks are obvious, and all of them have carving defects. The extra part of the money body shows that it was not carved with the money from the bank the day after tomorrow. If the bank's money is used for carving, the Qian Wen and currency can only be reduced, not increased.

All the above San Qian have unfinished * * * features, and they are not qualified sculptors who have finished carving. They may be the waste sculptors when making sculptors, or they may be the works of the money bureau technicians of sculpture sculptors. This kind of money world is rare, and it is a rare physical specimen for studying sculptors in the Qing Dynasty.

During the Republic of China, when the "Daqingmen" in Beijing was replaced by the "Zhonghua Gate", craftsmen tried to remove the stone tablet of "Daqingmen", turn the side engraved with "Daqingmen" into the wall, put it back outside and engraved the word "Zhonghua Gate". When the stone tablet was removed, they found that it was engraved with "Daming Gate".

History cannot be reversed repeatedly, so we have to carve another wooden plaque and hang it under the eaves.

The production of the national gate plaque was still like this, not to mention that it was of no value at that time, but a sculptor who made molds.

Bao Kang, the author of the Catalogue of Big Style, mainly lived in Daoguang and Xianfeng years, and the way of making carved mother in his book should be at that time, that is, in the middle and late Qing Dynasty.

The carved Niang in the middle and late Qing Dynasty has obvious characteristics, and it is as easy to identify as standing out from the crowd. The carved mother in the early Qing Dynasty was not outstanding in appearance, as simple as ordinary money, and it was difficult to distinguish it from ordinary money without careful observation.

This is why the carved Niang in the early Qing Dynasty is almost impossible to find so far.