Making Jewellery - August 2016

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72 makingjewellery.com

TIPS & TECHNIQUES



  1. I found it was easier to have the lower handle
    pressed on my work surface and to push the top
    handle down. The blanks can get stuck on the
    top part of the punch that does the cutting. To
    pull them off , pull the top handle away from the
    bottom and the cutting punch will retract into
    the upper part of the jaw, pushing the blank free.

  2. I cut a wide range of holes in a range of
    blanks before starting on the stamping. If you
    want holes in a particular spot, you can mark
    on the blank where you want the hole and line
    that up in the jaw.

  3. I did try drilling a hole in the aluminium
    with a 1.5mm metal drill bit and my Dremel to
    have a comparison. The top blank in picture
    6 is the drilled hole and the bottom one is a
    punched hole. You can see that the punch
    creates a much cleaner hole. When you use a
    drill, the drill creates burrs that need to be fi led
    off before you start to stamp.

  4. There are punch pliers available online, too.
    The hole sizes are a lot smaller than the bigger
    punch set but great for cutting small holes in
    soft metal. I bought EuroPunch pliers with a
    square 1.5mm hole to try out and liked it. It did
    cut through both the 1.2mm aluminium and


PHOTOGRAPHS: LAUREL GUILFOYLE, TANSY WHEELER

HOW TO MAKE


Blanks and cutting holes


  1. Metal blanks come in all sorts of shapes and
    sizes, so simply fi nd the ones you want to use.
    You are better off sticking to the softer base
    metals like aluminium, copper and brass as
    they take the stamp impressions easily and
    won’t damage your stamps. If you want to make
    a Sterling silver piece, anneal the metal before
    starting. Aluminium comes with a protective
    layer on both sides, so leave that on as long as
    possible to help stop scratches and marks.

  2. You can get blanks with holes already cut
    in them but the range is far more limited
    than the plain ones. So you will need to have
    some way of cutting holes in the blanks. My
    favourite tool to do this is the EuroPower
    Punch. It’s around £28 so it is not cheap, but it
    cuts seven diff erent sizes of hole and it works
    for pretty much every project.

  3. The thickest blank I use for this technique
    is 1.2mm (16 gauge) aluminium and the punch
    cuts through those with ease. The copper
    blanks are 0.8mm (20 gauge) and the punch
    has no problem with those either. To use a
    EuroPower P unch, you screw in the size of
    punch you want, place the blank between the
    jaws and push the handles together.


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makingjewellery.com

MATERIALS & TOOLS
● Metal blanks
● Hole cutter (hole punch, punch pliers
or drill)
● Fine-point permanent marker pen
● Coloured permanent marker pens
● Electrical tape
● Ruler or tape measure
● Letter stamps
● Hammer
● Steel block
● Fine grit sanding block

MJ96_P71-75_Blanks and Stamping SHSF.indd 72 23/06/2016 11:23

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