
1. After talking with the owner of the lapis, I organized the parts necessary to make her pendant: 14 gauge 14K yellow gold wire, 16 gauge 950 Palladium wire, 14K white gold 3.5 mm straight bezel , a .15 ct rd diamond, and 1.2x.75 mm flat 14K yellow gold stock. I decided to make this with the laser because I wanted to weld the components closed tight on the lapis.
I traced out the profile of the lapis with a blue sharpie on an index card covered with two strips of 2 in. wide packing tape. The tape allows you to wipe off the ideas the customer doesn’t like with an alcohol wipe until they are happy with the to-scale drawing. You can also lay the stone on a color copier or scanner to make a more high tech scale model. Then cover it in clear tape to draw the proposed bails on.

2. To save having to remove tool marks use nylon jawed pliers to bend your wire to fit the profile on the drawing. This will then be cut in half to form the two parts of the bail that go through the stone.

3. The stone has tight straight wall holes. To make the bail fit, two straight sections need to be cut to go through the holes and then joined to the two curved pieces. I made these from 950 palladium to make them wear longer as they rub against the stone. Use a regular wire cutter to leave a beveled cut of approximately 45 degrees on both sides of the end of the wire. This joint can be welded from both sides, so the double beveled joints are perfect here. Weld one end at a 90 degree angle. Slip it into the hole in the stone and check the angle.