Get a Free Quote
If you are designer, want to turn your creation into a unique treasure. If you are decoration company,seeking decoration, pure works of art...
About RoyalBronze
Royal Bronze specialises in crafting and manufacturing various types of bronze artworks. We cater to the needs of decoration companies, designers, and artists who wish to work with professional bronze workers to bring their designs to life.
Our list of services is divided into four major categories namely Animal Sculptures, Outdoor Statues, Bronze Carvings, and Religious sculptures. All of which can be availed at a competitive price!
Animal Sculptures provide a hint of elegance to any space. Whether you plan to use it in your home or in your office, you can experience a higher level of class and style with our animal bronze sculptures. These indoor bronze sculptures are worthy investments that add value to your space.
Outdoor Bronze Statue or public statues are great for commemorating history and people that give more meaning to our local landscape. Our outdoor sculptures are specially crafted according to your specifications. These outdoor sculptures are made with quality materials to ensure longevity and durability.
Bronze Carvings (metal plate) are perfect for recreating unique and intricate designs. Using this method, the malleability of bronze can be maximised to cast designs easier without losing the details. The beautiful finish and durability are just some of the things that you can enjoy with this type of bronze sculptures design.
Religious Sculptures that pay homage to our individual spiritual sentiments. These sculptures are made with care and respect, all while ensuring quality throughout the process.
Religious Sculptures that pay homage to our individual spiritual sentiments. These sculptures are made with care and respect, all while ensuring quality throughout the process.
Photo Gallery
Check out our bronze sculptures design and a bronze statue that you can choose from.
Discovery the Bronze Art
What is bronze?
Bronze is an alloy dating back to 4500 BCE composed of varying amounts copper and tin. Though pre-dated by another bronze alloy combining copper with arsenic, tin bronze has remained relatively unchanged since its discovery in the 3rd millennium BCE. Two forms of tin bronze were used during the Bronze Age, ‘mild bronze’ – which was 6% tin, hammered thin, and used for objects such as armor – and ‘classic bronze’, a composite with 10% tin that is still used for casting objects today.
The alloy is particularly strong, ductile, and, because its oxidation process prevents corrosion, extremely durable. The material is in fact so durable, that despite the earliest known cast bronze dating back to 2500 BCE, there are comparatively few examples of large bronze casts because, as boundaries changed and kings fell, they were often melted down and repurposed. The alloy has been used around the world since antiquity, including by the ancient Greeks, who considered it the highest form of sculpture and were the first to scale bronze figures to life-size. It remains the most desired material for monumental statuary.
As bronze ages, verdigris – a blue-green patina – forms on the surface. This is caused by the oxidation of the alloy during which a very superficial layer reacts to the oxygen in the air and becomes copper carbonate. This verdigris acts as a shield preventing any significant corrosion, but can also be easily removed without harming the sculpture’s integrity or durability. This should be done with aspecialized bronze cleaner and a soft sponge. Bronze is an inherently durable alloy which, with some care, can retain its original condition and quality for decades and centuries.
How bronze sculptures design made?
The lost-wax technique is the most common technique for creating bronze figures and sculptures. Though the exact process varies from foundry to foundry, the technique has been relatively standard since its first use in c. 3700 BCE. The artists begins with a model for which a mold is made. A soft material such as silicone is used for the inner mold, which must be malleable enough to produce an exact negative of the original object.
The outermold is rigid, often made of plaster. Molten wax is then poured into the mold thinly coating its inner surfaces. After it has cooled the wax is removed from the mold and ‘chased’ – perfected to remove any flaws or evidence of casting – wax rods are added to form channels through which the molten bronze can flow and gas can escape. A rigid cast, again often plaster, is built around the wax mold and the entire object is fired in a kiln. This both solidifies the plaster and melts the wax which drips out of the mold through the channels.
This leaves a prefect negative of the artist’s object into which the liquid bronze is poured.After it is cooled, the casting is removed from its plaster mold, the bronze which formed in place of the wax rods is removed, and the surface is ‘chased’ once more, polished, and sealed. A well-cast bronze sculpture is weatherproof and extremely durable.