Engraving is one of Iran’s traditional arts, which includes decorating and painting motifs on metal objects, especially copper, gold, silver, and rice. They pay. This art, with its thousands of years of history, became popular in the Achaemenid era and reached its peak in the Sassanid era. Nowadays, for the first etching, the inside or under the container or tray, usually made of silver or gold, is filled with bitumen and gypsum to reduce the noise of the pen and also to prevent the container from piercing during operation. Then draw the desired role on the container, select the appropriate brush and place it on the surface of the container. They are then hammered at the end of the pen to create grooves and patterns by varying the intensity of the impact on the container. When visiting Isfahan, tourists will surely hear the strokes of the brush strokes that keep the art alive.
