Copper model tools were usually part of the elite burial equipment during the Old Kingdom in the Ancient Egypt. Definition of tool types is based on the semiotic triangle and a correct reading and interpretation of the artefacts is approached here.
Model tools present in the burial equipment were tools for stone- and woodworking, these being materials of conspicuous consumption in the period. Tools are examined as symbols of the patron-craftsman relationship, where the ownership of the copper tools was the patron's.
Copper model tools were standardized and a connection between the size and amount of copper model tools and social status of the buried persons is explored. Persons with higher status had access to larger amounts of copper; however, the rules of the access were changing and access to copper was widening during the Old Kingdom.