mastic

resin
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Also known as: mastich

mastic, aromatic resin obtained as a soft exudation from incisions in mastic trees. It is used chiefly to make pale varnishes for protecting metals and paintings. When dispersed in bodied (thickened by heating) linseed oil, mastic is known as megilp and is used as a colour vehicle. Mastic is also used as an adhesive in dental work.

The mastic, or lentisc, tree, Pistacia lentiscus, is an evergreen tree or shrub of the sumac family (Anacardiaceae). The plant is indigenous to the Mediterranean coastal region from Syria to Spain, and particularly the Greek archipelago, but grows also in Portugal, Morocco, and the Canary Islands. Since about 50 ce, production of the resin has been confined almost exclusively to the Greek island of Khíos (Chios) in the Aegean Sea. The related P. atlantica, sometimes called mastic shrub, yields a similar solid resin.

The resin of the mastic tree is contained in the bark and not in the wood. In order to collect it, numerous vertical incisions are made in the stem and chief branches during June, July, and August. The resin speedily exudes and hardens into oval tears, which are collected every 15 days. The collection is repeated several times between June and September. Mastic is usually marketed in the form of roundish tears about the size of peas. These are transparent, with a glassy fracture, of a pale yellow or faint greenish tinge, which darkens slowly.

Color wheel, visible light, color spectrum. Colour wheel
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The Origins of Colors, Pigments, and Dyes

Several other plants yield resins that are referred to as mastic. Cape mastic is the product of Euryops multifidus, the resin bush—a plant of the aster family (Asteraceae). Dammar resin is sometimes sold under the name of mastic and comes from a number of Asian trees. The West Indian mastic tree is Bursera gummifera (Burseraceae), and the Peruvian mastic, or California pepper tree, is Schinus molle (Anacardiaceae). The false mastic, Sideroxylon mastichodendron (Sapotaceae), is a timber tree that grows in the West Indies and on the coast of Florida.

The term mastic is also used for various industrial materials used as protective coatings (for example, in thermal insulation and in waterproofing) and as cements (for example, in setting tile or wall panels).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Melissa Petruzzello.