Some early literary works allude to
lost wax casting. Columella,a Latin writer of the 1st century AD,mentions the processing of wax from beehives in De Re Rustica,perhaps for casting,as does Pliny the Elder,who details a sophisticated procedure for making Punic wax. One Greek inscription refers to the payment of craftsmen for their work on the Erechtheum in Athens (408/7–407/6 BC). Clay-modellers may use clay moulds to make terracotta negatives for casting or to produce wax positives. Pliny portrays Zenodorus as a well-reputed ancient artist producing bronze statues,and describes Lysistratos of Sikyon,who takes plaster casts from living faces to create wax casts using the indirect process.
Many bronze statues or parts of statues in antiquity were cast using the lost wax process. Theodorus of Samos is commonly associated with bronze casting. Pliny also mentions the use of lead,which is known to help molten bronze flow into all areas and parts of complex moulds. Quintilian documents the casting of statues in parts,whose moulds may have been produced by the lost wax process. Scenes on the early-5th century BC Berlin Foundry Cup depict the creation of bronze statuary working,probably by the indirect method of
lost wax casting.