Chǔ Jùn 褚峻 (fl. 1694–1745, per the catalog meta), zì Qiānfēng 千峯, of Héyáng 郃陽 (modern Héyángxiàn, Shǎnxī), was an early-Qing seal-carver and stone-rubbing dealer who supported himself by selling rubbings. Self-trained, he made expeditions to remote areas — deep mountains, ruined cities, abandoned tombs — searching for inscriptions that earlier jīnshí compilations had not noted. For each piece he personally examined, he sketched the stone’s shape, copied the characters in gōulè (outline) form, and noted the eroded or broken portions, then cut all this onto block as a reduced facsimile (suōběn 縮本). His one major work Jīnshí jīngyǎn lù 金石經眼錄 KR2n0046 (1 juan, 1736) is the resulting collection of 47 stelae, with critical apparatus by Niú Yùnzhèn 牛運震. Later expanded into a 2-juan Jīnshí tú 金石圖. CBDB has no entry for him.