little Silver pendant

Mario Sarto

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This is a little pendant made of Sterling Silver. Its diameter is 31 mm. Background was removed, stippled and blackened by sulfur. It was difficult to take a photo of the front - the plate is rounded slightly.
Thank you for watching this!
Mario
 

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Arnaud Van Tilburgh

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Mario, very nice work. I notice you made a lot of progress.
I never tried a kind of Bulino like your bird, I will have to give it a try soon.
It ads a lot of possibilities when one can do some Bulino , bird, dog, horse etc.
So well done, and keep posting your progress.

arnaud
 

Mario Sarto

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Bad Salzuflen
...What did you do around the edges of the disc iself?
Hello Cloudy, you mean the little pearls around? Those are very simple do - you cut two lines very close, leaving a burr in the middle. Then you take a millgrain-wheel and roll it under pressure over the burr. That's it.

Thank you for your kind words, Mario.
 

Jim Sackett

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Mario thanks for the little perals tip. I've been playing around with a millgrain tool and wasen't sure how to do it. "Two lines close together, leave bur, run millgrain tool between them." I'm gonna try it.

Jim
 

qndrgnsdd

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Bellingham WA
Mario: Nice work! To take good pictures of rounded silver objects you need to set your camera for Aperture dominant, That will allow you to use a small aperture and longer exposure, which will give you greater depth of field. this means all of the curved silver object will be in focus. Play with it it works
 

Jim Sackett

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Gonna try using my millgrain tool!

Mario send the picture, I'm not sure the lines are close enough together. I'll try it tomorrow. Do you push the millgrain like a graver or is it better to drag it?

Jim :eek:

10-07-2009 08;58;25PM.JPG

10-07-2009 08;56;41PM.JPG
 

Mario Sarto

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Messages
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Bad Salzuflen
Hello Jim, i made a "five step" picture for you.
step one: using a compass doing a line on the surface
step two: engrave the first line inside the circuit close to the line (you can still see the line, don't you?)
step three: engrave the second line outside the circuit close to the line, you can see now the burr in the middle.
step four: take the millgrain-wheel, set it on the bur and start rolling it over the bur. You go forward and backward
step five: with more pressure onto the wheel the little pearls came out

That's all - hope it is a little help for you.
 

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Doc Mark

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Thanks for the very clear tutorial Mario! I've never used a Millgrain tool but I thought I knew how it basically worked. Your great foto made the technique really make sense now. Thanks again,

Mark
 

KCSteve

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I've played with them a bit and Mario's tutorial covers everything I've learned.

They're made to run along an edge so if you don't have an edge you just cut a pair of lines to make (what amounts to) an edge. When you (or at least I) use them you can feel them kind of walking along forming each little bump.
 

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