[Kangxi style crimped enamel Kui dragon pattern warm inkstone box]
Kangxi style crimped enamel Kui dragon pattern warm inkstone box, Kangxi style of Qing Dynasty, 5 cm high, 14.7 cm long, 11.5 cm wide. The old collection of the Qing Palace
The inkstone box is rectangular, and the mouth is decorated with copper gilding and flower carving Kui dragon pattern for one week. Its lower four facades are light blue enamel, and each side is decorated with a peach stone in the center, and the two sides are decorated with a Kui dragon facing each other, meaning that two dragons hold longevity. The center of the box bottom is engraved with the four characters of the seal script “made in Kangxi”. The box can store hot water or burn charcoal, so that the inkstone hall will not freeze in winter, so as to warm the inkstone
The filigree lines of this inkstone box are neat, the enamel is exquisite, and the color is elegant, which has the distinctive characteristics of the filigree enamel works of the late Kangxi period
Songhua River Shikui Dragon Inkstone, Emperor Kangxi of the Qing Dynasty, is 14.3 cm long, 11.2 cm wide and 2.5 cm high, and the charcoal fire box is 14.7 cm long, 11.5 cm wide and 5 cm high. The old collection of the Qing Palace
The inkstone body is made of turquoise Songhua River stone. It is smooth and has animal face and square feet on each foot. On the edge of the inkstone surface, there is an engraved box one, and a lotus leaf ink pool one is carved inside. There is a small hole beside the pool for water storage. The inkstone hall is slightly concave with ink marks. The four sides of the inkstone body are carved with two opposite Kui dragon patterns
Members of the royal family of the Qing Dynasty have a special liking for the Songhua River inkstone from the white mountains and black waters. Songhua River inkstone has become the royal inkstone
掐丝珐琅夔龙纹暖砚盒底款