Cast Plaques PDF Print E-mail
Casting Bronze, Aluminum, Brass or Stainless Steel is a manufacturing process by which the liquid metal is (usually) poured into a mold, which contains a hollow cavity of the desired shape, and thenCast Metal Plaque Example - Diskey Sign Company allowed to solidify. The solid casting is then ejected or broken out to complete the process. Casting may be used to form hot liquid metals or various materials that cold set after mixing of components (such as epoxies, concrete, plaster and clay). Casting is most often used for making complex shapes that would be otherwise difficult or uneconomical to make by other methods.

Casting is a 6000 year old process. The oldest surviving casting is a copper frog from 3200 BC.

Diskey Sign Company offers a wide selection of Cast Plaques in various sizes, shapes and colors. The casting process generates two types of graphics - recessed and raised. A cast plaque is ideal for external applications as the graphics / letters cannot be removed and the metal will not break. Extreme weather temperatures both hot and cold will not adversly affect a cast metal plaque.

Below are examples of the different types of materials, borders, background textures, letter style types, rosettes, finishes and much more Diskey Sign Company can provide. Please click the image examples to enlarge.

Material

Cast Aluminum Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Cast Copper Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Cast Bronze Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Cast Brass Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Cast Stainless Steel Plaque - Diskey Sign Company

Standard Border

No Border Cast Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Single Line Bevel Cast Plaque - Diskey Sign Company Single Line Wide Bevel Cast Plaque - Diskey Sign Company

Double Line Border Cast Plaque - Diskey Sign Company


Background Texture

Leatherette Texture Cast Background - Diskey Sign Company Stipple Texture Cast Background - Diskey Sign Company Smooth Texture Cast Background - Diskey Sign Company Pebble Texture Cast Background - Diskey Sign Company


Patina Finishes

Verde Patina Finish - Diskey Sign Company Turquoise Patina Finish - Diskey Sign Company Green Patina Finish - Diskey Sign Company Patina Nouveau Finish - Diskey Sign Company


Oxidized Finishes

Dark Oxidized Plaque Finish - Diskey Sign Company Light Oxidized Plaque Finish - Diskey Sign Company

Portrait Options

Original Photo Portrait - Diskey Sign Company

Original Photo
We offer many options to honor or memorialize that special person. Send us the photo and choose from one of the three options shown here.

Photo Etched Portrait Example - Diskey Sign Company

Etched
The etching process allows you to forever replicate your photograph, line drawing or complex artwork.

This method utilizes a halftone dot pattern made from a 50-line screen. Halftone portraits resemble newspaper photographs, and have visible dot patters. The etched, recessed dots are black ink filled to contrast with the satin finished metal background. The best photographs for halftone etched portraits have high contrast tones with bright white areas, dense black areas and minimal grey tones. Photos that are monotone or have muted colors will produce poor halftone etchings. Halftone etchings are not available in aluminum.

Bas Relief Portrait Example - Diskey Sign CompanyBas Relief
We start with a photograph. Although we can use any quality photograph, the better the image the better the modeling effort. Remember, the finished image will be an artists interpretation of this photograph. An image of this clay model is sent to you via email for your comments or approval. When approved, the clay model is used for the bronze casting proess. While the clay model is a monotone, the finished bronze casting contains highlights. The bas relief is mechanically attached to the plaque background. Overall height of 6" to 9" with a finished depth of 3/4" to 1". (7 week lead time.)
Ceramic Portrait Example - Diskey Sign Company

Oval, Round & Rectangular Ceramic Inserts

Ceramic inserts use a standard-sized blank as its base.  A photograph is scanned at high resolution and a digital transfer is produced and applied to the blank.  A clear glaze is applied over this transfer, and the insert is fired in a kiln.