The restoration and reproduction techniques of bronze mirrors in Ezhou were selected into the fifth batch of Hubei Province's intangible cultural heritage representative works in 2016. The bronze mirrors unearthed in Ezhou from the Warring States Period to the Tang Dynasty are used as models. The bronze mirrors that can reflect the image are made through 18 processes, including mold making, clay mold shaping, clay mold roasting, alloy preparation and smelting casting, post-casting processing, and light transmission. The technique can be traced back to the Shang Dynasty and has a history of more than 3,000 years. Ezhou City is located in the south of the Yangtze River. As early as the Shang Dynasty, there was a bronze casting industry in Daye Tonglu Mountain under the jurisdiction of E County (now Ezhou). During the Three Kingdoms period, Sun Quan, the King of Wu, introduced Zhejiang mirror casting craftsmen and used the mineral resources in the jurisdiction to carry out large-scale bronze mirror production. Ezhou became one of the four major copper mirror production centers in the country, along with Luoyang, Shaoxing (ancient Kuaiji), and Xuzhou. According to archaeological discoveries of cultural relics, the number of bronze mirrors unearthed in Ezhou is large and complete, covering various dynasties from the Warring States Period to the Ming and Qing Dynasties. Therefore, Ezhou is known as the "hometown of ancient bronze mirrors" in China. The restored and reproduced ancient bronze mirrors are exquisitely made, with novel compositions, rich patterns and inscriptions, and exquisite mirror edge decoration. The restoration and reproduction techniques of bronze mirrors not only improve and develop ancient culture and art, but also play a positive role in protecting my country's cultural relics, excavating ancient cultural heritage, and displaying excellent ancient scientific and technological achievements.