Mémoire de bachelor : Haute Ecole Arc Conservation-Restauration, 2021.
Le Vitromusée de Romont a prévu pour novembre 2021 de présenter une exposition sur le verre plat, ses mises en oeuvre et son histoire. Leur souhait était donc de créer à partir de la préparation de cette exposition un protocole des actions à prendre avant une exposition, en commençant par la réalisation de constats d’état, suivies des interventions nécessaires concernant...
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Mémoire de master : Haute Ecole Arc Conservation-Restauration, 2021.
The Collections Centre of the Swiss National Museum, located in Affoltern-am-Albis, in the canton of Zurich, conserves a projection and enlargement lantern designed by a well-known local company selling projection and photography equipment. This device, dated from the early 20th century, has the particularity of having its lantern made of blued steel. This surface treatment offering both...
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In: Archaeometry, 2020, p. arcm.12638
The ceramic colours of eight late medieval to early Renaissance stove tiles were studied by scanning electron microscopy‐backscattered electron (SEM‐BSE) images and SEM with energy‐dispersive spectroscopy (SEM‐EDS). Microstructural observations and chemical compositions of these colours give some insight into the colouring agents and techniques used by the potters. All decorations...
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Porrentruy : Office de la culture et Société jurassienne d'Emulation, 2016
(Cahier d'archéologie jurassienne ; 37)
ISBN: 9782884360401
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In: Journal of the European Ceramic Society, 2018, vol. 38, no. 15, p. 5228–5233
A Raman study of a Sèvres soft paste (frit) porcelain plate allowed the identification of both the crystalline and amorphous phases. Cristobalite and pseudowollastonite gave main Raman signatures in the body where also tridymite, amorphous alkali silicate glass and lead arsenate apatite were detected. Na0.4K0.1Ca0.5Pb4(AsO4)3 lacunar apatite is identified as opacifier in blue and green...
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In: Minerals, 2018, vol. 8, no. 7, p. 269
This study provides an overview of the few archaeometric analyses of European white earthenwares from England, France, Italy, Slovenia, and Switzerland. White earthenwares were an extremely successful mass-product between ca. 1750 and 1900. They became “the porcelain of the poor man” and replaced the older traditional pottery such as faïence. The invention of this new ceramic type took...
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In: Clinical Oral Investigations, 2013, vol. 17, no. 9, p. 2127-2137
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In: Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology, 2013, vol. 67, no. 7, p. 1041-1052
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In: Journal of Ornithology, 2005, vol. 146, no. 4, p. 390-394
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In: Journal of Materials Research, 2010, vol. 25, no. 10, p. 1890-1897
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