Arnaud Van Tilburgh
~ Elite 1000 Member ~
I have a client who what an engraving on a round gold plate to be add to here bracelet.
Normally I would have done this by the one who has the Photoengraving machine.
But at is for a bracelet, the dots will be ruined soon.
And as I like hand engraving, I thought I will do it by hand, its a good practice and I get paid for it.
From Marcus I learned that he once made a “bulino†that was not accepted because none could see the lines.
But if you look at a banknote, with a loop X10, witch is standard to inspect fine work , you see lines.
So my idea is, why not engrave scenery / portrait that looks like engraving, with lines that can be seen.
The way I think these scenery / portrait is engraved the best, is the deeper the better.
These engravings, like al the others, need to catch light.
So the most durable ones are the ones with the deepest cuts.
My portrait can’t be compared with what I’ve seen here like the ones from Phill, Ron Marcus and all the other masters.
And this can be done with more and finer lines of course, but that means more time to engrave and less durable.
I have engraved this for practicing in about 6 ours on a polished plate, the engraving itself, not the plate, is from top head to bottom 26 mm
I used a 60° cabide with a face of 50 and a heel of 10.
I will have to redo it on the golden one
I’m also sure that portrait is perhaps the most difficult there is as it must look like the person.
I only had a small photo, so not that much detail
What do you think?
arnaud
This is the small photo I have with not much detail
This is the engraved portrait in approximately real size
This is how it looks with some magnification
Normally I would have done this by the one who has the Photoengraving machine.
But at is for a bracelet, the dots will be ruined soon.
And as I like hand engraving, I thought I will do it by hand, its a good practice and I get paid for it.
From Marcus I learned that he once made a “bulino†that was not accepted because none could see the lines.
But if you look at a banknote, with a loop X10, witch is standard to inspect fine work , you see lines.
So my idea is, why not engrave scenery / portrait that looks like engraving, with lines that can be seen.
The way I think these scenery / portrait is engraved the best, is the deeper the better.
These engravings, like al the others, need to catch light.
So the most durable ones are the ones with the deepest cuts.
My portrait can’t be compared with what I’ve seen here like the ones from Phill, Ron Marcus and all the other masters.
And this can be done with more and finer lines of course, but that means more time to engrave and less durable.
I have engraved this for practicing in about 6 ours on a polished plate, the engraving itself, not the plate, is from top head to bottom 26 mm
I used a 60° cabide with a face of 50 and a heel of 10.
I will have to redo it on the golden one
I’m also sure that portrait is perhaps the most difficult there is as it must look like the person.
I only had a small photo, so not that much detail
What do you think?
arnaud
This is the small photo I have with not much detail
This is the engraved portrait in approximately real size
This is how it looks with some magnification