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General

May 17, 2008

Jeweler's Saw

When using a jeweler’s saw, ALWAYS saw on the waste side of the line.  Cut as close to the line as possible without cutting into it.  It is always better to leave too much metal, which can be removed latter, than to cut away too much metal.  With experience, you will be able to cut right along the line with no additional clean up needed when finished.

Brad

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May 13, 2008

Jewelry Making Textured Finishes

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May 10, 2008

Jewelers Hand Files

Always mount hand files into handles.  Handles offer far more control and safety than just holding onto the un-mounted tang of a file.  Needle files have a smooth round tang that doubles as a handle.  However, they can be awkward to hold for more than brief periods.  It is helpful to fit the file into a larger and more comfortable handle.

Brad

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May 06, 2008

Jewelry Making Cleaning


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April 01, 2008

Practice Does Not Make Perfect

We have all heard “practice makes perfect.”  However, that statement does not take into consideration what is being practiced.  Practice makes permanent.  If you practice the wrong things or methods, after time it will not take any effort at all to do lousy work.  It takes perfect practice to make perfect.  That is where education comes in.  Knowledge alone will not make you a Master Jeweler.  However, without it you will not know how to develop the skills or how to execute the skills necessary to become a Master Jeweler.  Learn the fundamental skills and the proper mechanics of executing these skills, so that when practiced, the skills can be mastered allowing you to become, in time, a Master Jeweler.

Brad

February 20, 2008

The Master's Touch

The difference between a Master Jeweler and an average jeweler is not so much learning advanced techniques as a mastery over the basic ones.  For example, there is little difference between the soldering technique in the most complex hand fabricated item of jewelry and sizing a ring.  What sets the Masters work apart is the meticulous execution of those techniques.

The downfall of many bench jewelers is not a lack of skills but the determination and discipline to practice and fine-tune those skills to the degree of workmanship deserving the title of Master.  Often what hinders our progress is not a lack of knowledge, but the apathy towards accomplishing our work that we have allowed to creep in.  Over the years, it is easy to allow bad habits to develop like hurrying through our work or skipping certain steps.  To overcome this takes practice.  Just like a sports player will practice before performing on the playing field, or a musician will practice before performing on the stage, you need to continually practice before performing at the bench.

When was the last time that you did an actual practice exercise where you worked on a certain project just to develop a skill, and after critically examining the results to find areas that need improvement, practiced more to improve them.  (It is not practice that makes perfect, but perfect practice that makes perfect.)

Why not commit a little time each week, just to the development of your skills?  Why not get back to the basics and practice those fundamental techniques that seem so simple and easy like those basic procedures that take only a few days to learn, but a lifetime to master.  Remember, it is not the techniques that set the master apart but the meticulous execution of those techniques.

This is not to say knowledge and understanding of skills is unimportant.  It is just that often all we seek is new knowledge to overcome a problem when what is needed at the bench is development of the knowledge we already have.

Certainly, learning a helpful tip or a new trick can help anyone perform better work.  However, unless and until the basic techniques are practiced and mastered, can these new applications be performed with the perfection deserving the Master Craftsman title?  To accomplish this, spend less time trying to learn new tricks and spend more time mastering basic skills.

Strive to accomplish the work of a master.  This is a worthy goal of any jeweler regardless of where they are in the development of their career.  Practice each technique and develop every skill with the standard in mind that this is the work of a true master.  Even if this ultimate goal is never achieved, the striving for and the reaching toward it will create in you a better artisan. 

Brad