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📷 Eric teaching a technique / hands close-up at work

Education

Learn the Craft

Eric Stocker shares 47 years of mastery. Each video reveals the ancient techniques behind Cambodian lacquerware — from raw materials to finished masterpiece.

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Techniques & Process

Master Each Technique

It takes 10 years to train a master. Watch Eric demonstrate each technique step by step — the knowledge that separates craft from art.

📹 YouTube: Gold Leaf Application
Gold Leaf

Gold Leaf Application

The delicate art of applying 24-karat gold leaf to lacquer surfaces. Timing, pressure, and patience — traditional water gilding used in French cathedrals and Khmer temples for a thousand years.

📹 YouTube: Polishing & Finishing
Polishing

Polishing & Finishing

Achieving the mirror-like finish that defines master-level lacquerware. 20-30 hours of polishing with progressively finer materials, compounds, then bare hands with oil. Layers upon layers of refinement.

📹 YouTube: Eggshell Inlay
Eggshell Inlay

Eggshell Inlay Technique

Crushed eggshell becomes intricate mosaic patterns — fragments as small as a grain of sand, placed one at a time with tweezers into wet lacquer. Thousands per piece, creating organic patterns like cracked earth or living skin.

📹 YouTube: Color Pigments
Pigments

Color Pigments & Mixing

Natural pigments and traditional color mixing — cinnabar for sacred reds, botanical compounds for greens and browns. The palette of ancient Cambodian lacquer art, unchanged for centuries.

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"To prepare a master takes 10 years. There are no shortcuts — only layers of patience, practice, and respect for the material."
Eric Stocker

Knowledge Base

Understanding Lacquerware

Essential knowledge for collectors, curators, and enthusiasts. From caring for your piece to understanding the difference between natural and synthetic lacquer.

Care & Maintenance

How to Care for Lacquerware

Natural lacquer is remarkably durable but benefits from mindful care. Here are the essentials:

  • Avoid direct sunlight for prolonged periods
  • Clean with a soft, slightly damp cloth
  • Never use chemical cleaners or abrasives
  • Store in consistent humidity (50-60%)
  • Apply natural oil once a year to maintain lustre
Materials

Natural vs Synthetic Lacquer

The vast majority of "lacquerware" sold in Southeast Asia uses synthetic lacquer (cashew nut oil or polyurethane). Our workshop is the only one in Cambodia using real natural vegetal lacquer — harvested from Toxicodendron trees. The difference:

  • Natural: cures months, lasts centuries
  • Synthetic: dries hours, degrades in years
  • Natural: deepens in beauty over time
  • Synthetic: yellows and cracks with age
History

The Khmer Lacquer Tradition

Lacquerwork in Cambodia dates back over 1,000 years to the Angkor period. The Khmer Rouge regime (1975-1979) systematically destroyed the country's artistic heritage, killing nearly every artisan who knew the craft. Eric Stocker's work since 1998 has been a revival — training a new generation of artisans in techniques that were nearly lost forever.

Technique

Water Gilding Explained

Water gilding is the oldest and most refined method of applying gold leaf. Unlike oil gilding (used in most commercial production), water gilding produces a luminous, burnished finish that can be polished to a mirror-like surface. This is the technique used in the Louvre, Versailles, and the great Khmer temples of Angkor.

Technique

The Art of Eggshell Inlay

Eggshell inlay (coquille d'oeuf) is a technique perfected in Vietnam and Cambodia. Eggshell fragments — sometimes as small as a grain of sand — are pressed into wet lacquer one at a time. The natural crackle pattern creates textures resembling ice, cracked earth, or reptilian skin. A single bowl may contain thousands of fragments.

Collecting

Lacquerware as Investment

Museum-quality lacquerwork is among the most valued decorative arts. Comparable Japanese lacquerwork by masters like Shibata Zeshin sells for $500,000+ at Christie's. Each Stocker piece represents 80-300+ hours of master-level handwork — a level of craft that fewer and fewer people in the world can produce.

Frequently Asked

Questions About the Craft

How long does it take to make a piece?
Depending on complexity: a small bowl takes 2-3 months, a Buddha sculpture 3-4 months, and our most elaborate prestige pieces can take 4-6 months. Each layer of lacquer needs 3-7 days to cure, and most pieces require 20-50 layers.
What makes natural lacquer different from what I see in markets?
99% of "lacquerware" in Southeast Asian markets uses synthetic lacquer (cashew nut oil or polyurethane) which dries in hours and degrades within years. Our natural lacquer — real tree sap from Toxicodendron trees — takes weeks to cure but lasts centuries, deepening in beauty over time. We are the only workshop in Cambodia using authentic natural lacquer.
Can I commission a custom piece?
Yes. Eric accepts a limited number of custom commissions per year. You can choose dimensions, technique, materials, and incorporate personal symbols or initials. Contact us via WhatsApp or the contact form to discuss your vision.
Why are the pieces more expensive than market lacquerware?
Each piece represents 80-300+ hours of master-level handwork using genuine natural materials (real lacquer, 24k gold leaf, rare textures). Market lacquerware typically uses synthetic materials, machine processes, and takes hours — not months — to produce. Our pieces are investment-grade art objects built to last centuries.
Can Eric restore my antique lacquerware?
Yes. Eric is one of the rarest living experts in natural lacquer restoration, having trained for decades at the French National Museums including the Louvre. He can restore antique lacquerware, gilded furniture, and museum pieces. He also offers expert consultation on care, conservation, and authentication. Contact us for a consultation.

Ready to Begin?

Explore the Collections

Now that you understand the craft, discover the pieces. Each one carries the soul of these ancient techniques.

Browse Collections Contact Eric
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