Sealing wax
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Sealing wax was used to seal "letters close" and later (from about the 16th century) envelopes. It was also used to take the impression of seals on important documents, or to create a hermetic seal on containers. Now mainly used for decorative purposes, it was formerly used to ensure that the contents of the envelope were secure.
While exact recipes vary, they can generally be divided into those before and after the commencement of trade with the Indies. In the Middle Ages it was typically made of beeswax melted together with "Venice turpentine", a greenish-yellow resinous extract of the European Larch tree. The earliest such wax was uncoloured, somewhat later the wax was often coloured red with vermilion. From the 16th century it instead was compounded from a mixture of various proportions of shellac, turpentine, resin, chalk or plaster, and colouring matter (often still vermilion, or else red lead), but no actual wax. The proportion of chalk varied; coarser grades were also used to seal wine bottles and preserves, finer grades for documents. Originally the sealing wax was red, but later it might also be black (tinted with lamp black or ivory black) or green (tinted with verdigris). Some users such as the British Crown assigned different colours to different types of documents. Today a range of synthetic colours are available.
Sealing wax is usually available in the form of sticks, sometimes with a wick, or as granules. The stick is melted at one end, or the granules heated in a spoon, normally using a flame, and then placed where required, usually on the flap of an envelope. While the wax is still soft, a seal with a design (often of metal) is impressed in it, sealing the envelope.
Modern use
Because sealing wax is a fairly unfamiliar artifact in modern society, English speakers who have heard the term but not encountered it in literature frequently misinterpret it as "ceiling wax", perhaps on the analogy of "floor wax" (used to polish floors).Sealing wax does not travel well through the mail, so putting the seal on an inner envelope, surrounded by an outer envelope, works best. A new method is "faux sealing wax", which involves a stick of wax/glue that is inserted into a hot glue gun. This "wax" is more flexible and will survive mailing on the outside of an envelope. It looks just like regular sealing wax, and since it does not involve a flame and dispenses quickly, is frequently used for large mailings, such as wedding invitations.
See also
External links
- http://www.letterseals.com
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