What Are Our Products Made Of?
Alabastrite
Alabastrite is Windgate Gift's product line
name for polyresin items. Alabastrite is a stone-based material
which can be intricately molded producing great detail, and will
allow paint to adhere. These items may be cleaned by dusting,
however, they should not be washed with water as they are painted
with water soluble paints.
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Bone China
White clay with bone ash added. Bone ash
content must be at least 25% by U. S. guidelines. Fired at 1800
degrees. The translucent material is finished with a glaze or
underglaze (matte). Lighter, stronger, more expensive than
porcelain.
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Porcelain
Fine ground white clay, molded and fired in
an oven for eight hours at 1200 degrees. Finished with a glazed,
underglazed, or "bisque" finish. Glazing produces a high gloss;
underglaze produces a matte finish. Bisque is a matte finish
without glaze. After finishing, the item is "cooked" for six hours
at 800 degrees.
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Jade Porcelain
Jade porcelain is a type of porcelain made
with a finer clay. Usually no glaze or only a colorless glaze will
be applied at the final firing to show off the very smooth surface
and to preserve the translucency. Example: 27112. Jade Porcelain
is used for night lights because of its high degree of
translucency when lit.
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Stoneware
White clay with fine ground stone. Working
with stoneware demands great expertise, and is in fact becoming a
lost art. Stoneware is safe to use in microwave and conventional
ovens.
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Patchwork
Items
Unique fabric or paper prints are applied to
the surface of porcelain, dolomite or polyresin items. After
application, 12 layers of lacquer are added and the item is hand
polished to a high gloss between each layer.
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Cubic Zircon
The most successful simulated diamond.
Properties such as refraction, hardness, and specific gravity are
remarkably similar to diamonds. Example: 27432. Cubic zirconia are
very hard to distinguish from diamonds; sometimes a jewelers loop
will be needed to see the difference.
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Diamond
Extremely hard, highly refractive colorless
or white crystalline of carbon. Diamonds, like all gemstones, are
judged in terms of Carats, or weight (different from Karats, as in
gold purity).
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Gold
The ultimate precious metal. Virtually
indestructible, amazingly malleable, doesn't rust or tarnish.
Graded by purity; in the U.S. a scale of 24 is used, so 24 Karats
(24K) is 100% pure. 18K is 18 parts gold and 6 parts alloy (other
metals), and so on. 10K is the legal minimum for Karat-graded
gold. The word "Plumb"
indicates the exact purity of the piece.
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Gemstones
Rubies, sapphires, emeralds and amethysts,
often treasured as birthstones, fall under the category of
gemstones. (Birthstones are listed in the back of your WOP
catalog.) Gemstones are priced and graded by Carat weight.
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Pearl
A smooth, lustrous, variously-colored
deposit formed around a grain of sand in the shell of a certain
mollusk. Pearls may be formed naturally or "cultured" through an
artificial implanting process.
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Sterling
Silver
To qualify as "sterling" a given piece must
be composed of a least 92.5% pure silver.
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Hong Tze
To closely emulate a special stone found in
China which is known for its deep red color, these items are
created using an alabastrite polyresin. Hong Tze pieces are highly
polished, further bringing out the intense, deep red color.
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Frosted
Acrylic
Acrylic items are given the French Lilac
process, (used on glass), to achieve the distinctive frosted look.
Example: 27205. The drama of frosted glass without the weight.
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Gypsum
Gypsum is a white mineral which is usually
used to make Plaster of Paris.
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Dolomite
A magnesia-rich, sedimentary rock resembling
limestone, dolomite is either gray, pink or white in color.
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All Rights Reserved.
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