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Jeweler's Enameling Workshop: Techniques and Projects for Making Enameled Jewelry

Jeweler's Enameling Workshop: Techniques and Projects for Making Enameled Jewelry

Previous price: $24.99 Current price: $7.98
Publication Date: January 23rd, 2016
Publisher:
Krause Craft
ISBN:
9781632500007
Pages:
160
WinterRiver Books & Gallery
1 on hand, as of Apr 16 4:37pm
(Crafts/Hobbies)
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Description

Add Vibrant Color to Your Jewelry!

Enameling is the one of the best ways to add color to your jewelry--and anyone can do it! In Jeweler's Enameling Workshop, master jeweler Pauline Warg shares her easy-to-follow approach to enameling. You'll first learn the basics of kiln firing and torch firing, including equipment, tools, safety, and how to troubleshoot problems. Then, twenty projects for beautiful necklaces, pendants, earrings, bracelets, and rings walk you through various dry and wet enameling techniques. You'll learn to:

   • Stencil simple designs using multiple colors of enamel
   • Incorporate foil and glass beads and threads into your designs
   • Layer enamel on stamped metal for added dimension
   • Use metal screen as a canvas on which to create an enameled pattern
   • Create intricate designs with the classic techniques of cloisonne and champleve
Clear photographs and detailed step-by-step instructions will have you creating stunning designs using exciting techniques in no time.

About the Author

Pauline Warg has been a metalsmith for 38 years. She is the author of Making Metal Beads, a contributor to Jewelry Design Challenge (both Lark, 2010), and appears in the DVD Basic Jewelry Enameling: Torch Fired Tutorial with Pauline Warg. Pauline owns and operates WARG Enamel and Tool Center in Scarborough, Maine.

Praise for Jeweler's Enameling Workshop: Techniques and Projects for Making Enameled Jewelry

"An expansive overview provides everything from the chemistry behind enameling to tools and supplies and enameling safety to wet-packing techniques such as cloisonne and champleve. Jewelrymakers with metalworking experience may find enameling a natural extension of their repertoire of techniques, and there's enough information and projects here to get started." --Library Journal