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craquelure
[ krak-loor, krak-loor; French krakuh-lyr ]
noun
, plural cra·que·lures [krak-, loorz, krak, -l, oo, rz, k, r, a, k, uh, -, lyr].
- a network of fine cracks or crackles on the surface of a painting, caused chiefly by shrinkage of paint film or varnish.
craquelure
/ ˈkrækəlʊə /
noun
- a network of fine cracks on old paintings caused by the deterioration of pigment or varnish
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Word History and Origins
Origin of craquelure1
First recorded in 1910–15; < French, equivalent to craquel(er) “to crackle, crack” (imitative) + -ure -ure
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Word History and Origins
Origin of craquelure1
C20: from French, from craqueler to crackle, from craquer to crack, of imitative origin
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Example Sentences
A gifted forger can copy a painting, but he cannot copy a craquelure.
From Literature
Like a fingerprint, every craquelure is unique.
From Literature
He compared the painting with photographs of the many cracks, or craquelure, in the original.
From Literature
In the Debussy, their often haunting approach fractures the lines in the first movement ever so slightly, like the spider-web craquelure in the varnish of an old master painting; their Stravinsky exudes good-natured, unaffected, unexaggerated warmth.
From New York Times
Stalks of dry grass and cracked mud looking like an old painting’s craquelure.
From Washington Post
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