🕶 New Season, New Shades! ☀ Upgrade your look with the hottest sunglasses of Spring/Summer 2025!
Sales 365 Days Logo

Product not found

The product you are looking for does not exist or has been deleted.

You might also like

IN
Archival Methods 1" x 50 Yards Tyvek Tape Pressure Sensitive

Archival Methods 1" x 50 Yards Tyvek Tape Pressure Sensitive

An essential tool for preservation and packaging, the 1" x 50 Yards Tyvek Tape Pressure Sensitive is a testament to the fusion of durability and convenience. Crafted from robust white nonwoven polyethylene, this high-quality tape is engineered to withstand the rigors of handling and storage, resisting tears and punctures with ease. Its versatile nature makes it an ideal choice for a multitude of applications, including securing window mat hinges, reinforcing folder spines, and executing meticulous book repairs.The tape boasts a pressure-sensitive adhesive that ensures a strong bond without the need for water activation, streamlining your workflow and saving valuable time. The inclusion of a removable liner further enhances the user experience, allowing for precise application and reduced waste. While the adhesive is permanent, ensuring a long-lasting hold, it is important to note that it should not be applied directly to artwork or delicate surfaces where reversibility is required.Archival Methods, a brand synonymous with archival-grade products, brings you this affordable Tyvek Tape, ensuring that quality is never compromised. Whether you're an archivist, librarian, or someone in need of reliable packaging solutions, this tape is designed to meet the highest standards of performance and longevity. Embrace the peace of mind that comes with using a product that is as enduring as it is efficient.

Brand: Archival MethodsCustom Shipping
$23.5
IN
The Metropolitan Museum of Art Chroma: Sculpture in Color from Antiquity to Today

The Metropolitan Museum of Art Chroma: Sculpture in Color from Antiquity to Today

Edited by Seán Hemingway, Sarah Lepinski, and Vinzenz Brinkmann Many ancient and early modern works that are viewed in monochrome today were once painted in vibrant colors. Lost to time until recently, the pigments and other surface treatments that originally adorned these objects offer a deeper appreciation of the cultures from which they originate. This handsome volume features new research by more than thirty international experts in polychromy, including art historians, conservators, scientists, and photographers. Identified through advanced technologies, scientific analyses, and in-depth research, their discoveries of surviving traces of color span the globe and vary in material, including an Archaic Greek marble sphinx, an ancient Phoenician cloisonné furniture plaque, Mexica (Aztec) lime-stone sculptures, and medieval and Renaissance European marbles and bronzes. This wide-ranging publication explores how these works further our understanding of ancient ideas around skin color, race, and gender; summarizes recent advances in the field; and considers polychromy's controversial rediscovery and modern reception-highlighting the role of reconstructions such as 3D-printed replicas and virtual animations in contemporary museum practice as well as the resurgence of polychromy techniques in postmodern and contemporary European architecture. Seán Hemingway is John A. and Carole O. Moran Curator in Charge and Sarah Lepinski is a Curator, both in the Department of Greek and Roman Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Vinzenz Brinkmann is Head of the Department of Antiquities and Asia at the Liebieghaus Skulpturensammlung, Frankfurt am Main.

Brand: The Metropolitan Museum of Art3-8 days
$50