I'm probably not the average demographic that watches these as a young man, but your expertise has helped me out a lot in my process of making the many sketches of a piece of jewelry I designed for my girlfriend months ago finally come off the page and become a reality. I appreciate it very much :)
Excellent Video, I've had a rolling mill for a while now but am currently teaching myself enameling, so now looking at experimenting with the mill to texture copper/silver for my Champleve pieces, Thanks for the tips. Liked an subbed ;@)
Thanks. The leaves are normally used for card making and similar crafts so most craft stores stock them or you can find them online. They are called skeleton leaves.
Depends what area you're interested in - we'd recommend taking a look at our Build A Tool Kits which give you an idea of what tools you'll likely need 🙂 www.kernowcraft.com/collections/build-a-tool-kit
I was privileged to work in a manufacturing facility where we used 24-pass Tishken roll-forming mills where we could maintain tight tolerances. In our more advanced applications we would 'pre-notch' the uncoiled metal strip in a continuous feed method after the strip had passed through a sizing mill. Maintaining the correct dimensions were left to our tool makers, engineers and troubleshooters. I was in the latter group. We would see fluctuations in hardness and ductility within our batches of strip material and it was found that by varying the pressure on the rolls in the first two passes of the forming process that the proper relation of dimensions of the pre-notched holes, slots and irregularly-shaped cuts could be maintained by pressure alone.
1. Don't take the Lord's name in vain. 2. Don't be a petty complainer. Most of us would agree that she talked as much as was necessary to produce a good video.
I'm probably not the average demographic that watches these as a young man, but your expertise has helped me out a lot in my process of making the many sketches of a piece of jewelry I designed for my girlfriend months ago finally come off the page and become a reality. I appreciate it very much :)
Thank you, I'm glad you found it useful :)
nice demo thanks
Probably one of my favorite demonstrations of anything ever. So many great tips
Wow, what a lovely comment!
Very nice earrings thank you for sharing
Very helpful thanks
I definitely like the second set of leaves. The texture seems to be deeper and I can see it much more clear
Thanks! Just got a mill. Never considered the "stretch". Beautiful earrings!
How did you get the Cooper earrings to look silver in color?
lots of great tips and explanations, thank for sharing !! :)
Thanks for a great video 🙏🏻
Wonderful video thank You you are the best
Thank you :)
Love this! Thank you!!
Excellent Video, I've had a rolling mill for a while now but am currently teaching myself enameling, so now looking at experimenting with the mill to texture copper/silver for my Champleve pieces, Thanks for the tips. Liked an subbed ;@)
Great demonstration. So much useful inspiring information. Thank you for posting the video.
lovely. lots of information too :)
I really recommend a geared mill durston have new model agile with 4_1 gearing you seem to struggle with yours without gearing
It's just down to space and cost. I have 4 mills across 4 different venues so don't use any one enough to justify the price :) One day maybe.
Wonderful video indeed. Can you tell me where I can buy the leaf veins that you use to texture the metal with the rolling-mill?
Thanks. The leaves are normally used for card making and similar crafts so most craft stores stock them or you can find them online. They are called skeleton leaves.
What is the ideal starter kit for jewelry making
Depends what area you're interested in - we'd recommend taking a look at our Build A Tool Kits which give you an idea of what tools you'll likely need 🙂 www.kernowcraft.com/collections/build-a-tool-kit
Glowing you out the material?
Why not make the ear wires out of copper, too?
They could turn your earlobes/holes black if they were copper.
I was privileged to work in a manufacturing facility where we used 24-pass Tishken roll-forming mills where we could maintain tight tolerances. In our more advanced applications we would 'pre-notch' the uncoiled metal strip in a continuous feed method after the strip had passed through a sizing mill. Maintaining the correct dimensions were left to our tool makers, engineers and troubleshooters. I was in the latter group. We would see fluctuations in hardness and ductility within our batches of strip material and it was found that by varying the pressure on the rolls in the first two passes of the forming process that the proper relation of dimensions of the pre-notched holes, slots and irregularly-shaped cuts could be maintained by pressure alone.
OMG she talks too much
I shall endeavour to try filming future demos through the medium of mime :)
1. Don't take the Lord's name in vain. 2. Don't be a petty complainer. Most of us would agree that she talked as much as was necessary to produce a good video.