• Title/Summary/Keyword: 혼례유물

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A Content Analysis of Traditional Wedding Artifacts (혼례유물에 대한 내용분석)

  • 최배영
    • Journal of Families and Better Life
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    • v.21 no.5
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    • pp.155-170
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    • 2003
  • This paper will provide a basic analysis of traditional wedding artifacts as they appear on museum websites and their value for scientific research. The results of this study are as follows: 1. There were a total of 115 wedding artifacts(72 written documents related to weddings, 43 marital items) on the website of a museum. Most of them were related to the latter half of Cho-sun Dynasty. From these artifacts, we may understand the culture surrounding wedding during the transitional period from the Cho-sun Dynasty to modem time. 2. By analyzing such wedding artifacts, we can supplement existing methods of study such as literature research and case histories. In this way, we may better understand the history and culture of weddings. 3. In order to gain a deeper understanding of the culture of weddings we need to adopt a more interdisciplinary approach of wedding artifacts.

A Study of the Bezel Settings of a JinjuseonUsed for Joseon Royal Weddings Based on an Examination of the Washers (제조선시대 궁중혼례용 '진주선(眞珠扇)'의 받침못을 통해 본 감장(嵌裝) 기법 고찰)

  • Sim, Myung Bo;Kim, Sun Young
    • Conservation Science in Museum
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    • v.21
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    • pp.17-28
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    • 2019
  • The term jinjuseon(眞珠扇), meaning literally a pearl fan, refers to a fan decorated with precious stones for use in royal wedding ceremonies. This study examined a jinjuseon housed in the National Palace Museum of Korea (NPMK) which currently lacks jeweled ornaments. In order to determine whether pearls or other gemstone settings originally ornamented the fan,the surface and composition of the gray materials remaining on the washers were investigated and the fan was compared with other artifacts decorated using similar techniques. The analysis revealed that the gray materials visible around the round rims of the washers contain tin-lead alloys. The traces of folded nails suggest that soldering was not applied. The remains of the infill observed in other artifacts with bezel settings indicate that this jinjuseon in the NPMK collection was produced using abezel setting technique wherein pearls or other gemstones were affixed by filling cylindrical bezels with tin-lead alloys.