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Restorative Art
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Restorative Art

QuestionAnswer
Restorative Art The care of the deceased to recreate natural form or color
Form The shape of the surface structure or head.
Color Refer to those rays of light reflected from the surface.
Closed casket Leaves bitter memory in minds of mourners.
Open viewing Helps mourners accept the finality of death.
Restorative Art has reached a high performance in? United States and Canada
The first people to practice any type of restorative art? The Egyptians
Egyptians extended their practices Upon the entire remains
At the temples the incision was made at the Hair region
Egyptian methods The organs were removed, the skin was incised to remove blood, and the remains were immersed in vats not presentable for viewing.
Mask making In France and England, artistic practice associated with the funeral ceremonies of kings and queens.
Restorative Art began 19 century in United States and Canada by Thomas Holmes
Yellow soap Was employed by an embalmer around 1914-15.
Mortuary’ chemical companies had turned to the production of formaldehyde fluids in 20th Century
Restorative waxes became available in Mid 20s
Teachers institute in restorative art was arranged by the national association of colleges of mortuary science. In 1955
2nd Teachers Institute was held in 1968
The publishing of the first text on mortuary cosmetology was in 1973; RA Color and Cosmetics
Average case of restoration Involves only the cosmetic application and corrective posing of the features.
Minor restorations Requiring minimal effort, skill, or time to complete.
Major Restorations Require long period of time, are extensive or require technical skill.
Pre embalming treatments Corrective posturing of the eyes, mouth or cheeks Corrective alignment of nose and lower jaw Sutures to hold muscles or flaps of skin Suturing clean cuts Resetting dislocated fracture Supporting surface tissues Correction of buck teeth Blisters
Embalming treatments Internal tissue building or coloring Maintaining feature corrections Limiting swelling
Post embalming treatments Removal of scabs Excision of diseased or mutilated tissues Reduction of swelling Hypodermic tissue building Wax surfacing Feature modeling Bleaching and masking of discoloration Correction of buck teeth Attachment of dismembered parts
Physiognomy The study of the face and features
Asymmetry The differences of paired features
Norm Most common characteristic of each part of the face.
Anterior Front or forward part
Posterior Behind or toward the rear
Superior Position closer to the vertex of the skull
Inferior Refers to the position below or toward the feet.
Medial Position closer to the medial plane - midline
Lateral Refers to the position farther away from medial plane.
Bilateral Refers to the two sides
Median Vertical plane that divides the head into left and right sides.
Horizontal planes Cut across
Oblique Plane Slanted; neither vertical nor horizontal
Surface plane Surface exhibiting a minimum curvature
Projection Jutting out of a part or structure in comparison with another structure or part.
Prominence Refers to the state of standing firm as to be readily seen.
Recession Refers to the act of receding (moving backward) to a more distant point.
Depression Refers to a sunken (Concave) area or part.
White Race Caucasoid
Black race Negroid
Yellow race Mongoloid
Created by: Club3000
 

 



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