Add free shipping to your order with these great books
Electroforming : Jewellery Handbooks - Leslie Curtis

Electroforming

By: Leslie Curtis

Paperback | 1 January 2005 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $39.99

$38.25

or 4 interest-free payments of $9.56 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 5 to 10 business days

When will this arrive by?
Enter delivery postcode to estimate

Electroforming is a technique used by jewellery makers as well as ceramicists and glass artists. It allows the manufacture of delicate and/or irregular shapes that would be difficult to achieve by other means, as well as repetition pieces (using moulds), which can also be difficult to make. For jewellery, electroforming means that relatively lightweight and delicate shapes can still be made rigid and strong, and that fastenings, etc., can be attached to difficult or irregular shapes. It also allows intricate details to be faithfully reproduced (coating a spider's web in gold to make jewellery, for example).

More in Precious Metal, Precious Stones & Jewellery in Artworks & Design

The Watch Book Rolex : 3rd updated and extended edition - Gisbert L. Brunner
Watch Book : Compendium - Revised Edition - Gisbert L. Brunner

RRP $160.00

$110.90

31%
OFF
Koh-i-Noor : History of the World's Most Infamous Diamond - William Dalrymple
Little Book of Prada : Little Books of Fashion - Laia Farran Graves

RRP $29.99

$20.75

31%
OFF
Little Guides to Style Collection : The History of Eight Fashion Icons - Emma Baxter-Wright
Little Book of Seoul Style : The Fashion Story of the Iconic City - Dianne Pineda-Kim
Little Book of Balmain : The story of the iconic fashion house - Karen Homer
Jewel : The Definitive Visual Guide - DK

RRP $75.00

$55.75

26%
OFF
Icons of Style: Taylor Swift : The story of a fashion legend - Glenys Johnson
Vintage Rolex : The Largest Collection in the World - David Silver
Observing Learning in Early Childhood - Stella Louis
Cartier: Nature Sauvage : High Jewelry and Precious Objects - Hélène Bouillon
Age of Grandeur : The Ultimate Guide to 19th-Century Jewellery - DAVID BENNETT