Silversmithing Rings and Bracelets Tool Kit
Once you start making Rings and Bracelets you'll find you can use some tools to make it easier.
Video Transcript
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Hi, it's Dave Smith here again.
I'm here to show you our rings and bracelets toolkit.
As soon as I get this puppy with all Lola tools unwrapped,
I'll set 'em out here and show you again.
Here they are, all of 'em laid out.
We shipped this package free using flat rate
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and territories, including Alaska and Hawaii.
Let's get the big ones out of the way. First here.
This is a 16
inch oval bracelet mandrel.
I think it probably weighs about four pounds.
I didn't check it, but
that's the mandrel that we include with it.
Very popular for making cuffs
and on bracelets You can hear how it hit the floor.
This is a swivel by swivel jaw vice.
It is designed with a top here
that swivels around
and allows you to tighten this vice up in various positions.
It clamps onto your bench. It has a rubber jaw.
I like it for sawing rings.
I'll put them in here and when I'm sawing the double band in
half, it comes in real handy.
A lot of times when you're using the bench pen
for sawing things, you end up with a situation
where your saw goes all different directions
and you end up with a cut
that goes all different directions.
If you can stay in, in a double band ring, uh, in a,
in a sawing manner, similar to this, a lot
of times you can use just any old blade
and keep it moving pretty good and not damage anything.
Of course you don't want to tighten 'em too tight.
You gotta be careful with this.
If you start loosening it
and you loose it too far, there is a washer in here
that will come loose
and it will roll underneath the refrigerator
or anywhere else you want
and that vice won't work well without that washer.
It's a cup washer designed to attach that ball.
Anyway, that's a nice, nice vice that we use.
Alright, I think I can get a little closer in here.
This is a German style jeweler saw.
What's really nice about it is a couple
of things, actually a few.
Number one, this frame is really nice and straight
and the line width itself so it makes cutting a lot easier.
A lot of the cheaper ones are all
bent over one way or another.
It has really nice machined clamps
for clamping your blade in right here.
It has a stop so that it doesn't come apart when you
move the saw out to put your blades in.
And best of all, what I like the most about it is it has an
adjustable end over here to keep tightening your blade
as it stretches and gets looser in your, in your tool.
'cause you gotta keep that thing pinging.
If you don't, it's gonna break the blades on you real bad.
It also comes with 144 blades.
12 of 12 of 12. Sure it does.
Let's get 'em back in the box.
Don't you just wanna reach to the camera sometimes
and tell people what to do.
This is a nine face texturing hammer.
It has nine different heads that bolt on.
There's a few of these out there in the world
and some of 'em are really, really cheap.
Ones like this typically are a little bit higher quality.
With these nine faces you can do a lot of things.
This particular face that I'm tightening on here right now,
I have over six patterns that I teach in my classes that
that particular head can make.
So when you get this at home, you're gonna want to take it,
put a piece of paper or something behind that head so
that when you're hammering it doesn't come loose.
It gets some, get some compression on
it to keep some pressure on it.
This is called a wrap and tap pliers.
I call it a ring wrapping pliers
because you wrap around here with metal,
with your wideband rings, one of the things
that you get is a nice flat even wrapped so
that the ends meet really nicely together.
Whereas when you're using a tapered mandrel
and you push things around that,
your ring ends up being tapered on the inside
and then you have to tweak it to get 'em
to to come together, right?
If you're using a wide band
and you try to do it on the ring mandrel, most
of the time you end up with a really nasty looking joint.
I call 'em ring flyers. This is a
been called a wedding band
or a wide band ring ring sizing tool.
A lot of folks, fingers are a little bit different size.
There's a narrow band ring sizers also like
for a single band ring.
This is a watch case knife.
It is designed for taking the WA backs off of watches
so you can place the batteries.
But if you'll notice how short this area is right here,
it allows me, in a lot of cases, a lot
of knives have a longer Edge than that
and they're a lot thinner
and when you try prying on things with 'em
or working with things with 'em, they'll either break
or mar the surface.
I use this to spread the, I use this
to spread the band on rings when I'm making them.
If they're getting like a de dual band,
this is a curved shear.
It's designed for cutting around corners and circles
and inside joints.
We use that in place of the straight shear
of a similar design that comes in our beginning kit
for getting closer to things
and having less deviation in the back plate.
Whenever you cut with a pair of shears,
you damage the metal a little bit right where you cut.
And when you're cutting with straight shears,
it has a tendency to bend it over more than
it does with this shear.
This is a T handle punch.
Some people call it a helicopter punch
and what it has is in here it has two different sizes.
I believe they're one millimeter
and two millimeter so
that you can put your metal in this jaw here
and screw that screw down
to knock a hole in the metal that you have underneath.
It's designed for non-ferrous metals mean you shouldn't be
using it on steel and Things like aluminum,
copper, silver, and up to 20 gauge.
You don't wanna be messing with stuff
that's thicker than 20 gauge on it
because you'll break those ends off of there.
Works you really nice for
where you're putting the ear wires through.
Earrings
nine, nine punch for marking your jewelry.
You can see it there I believe if you look pretty
close, 9, 9, 9.
Or if you wanted, you could say it was a 6, 6 6.
This is a lead block when you are stamping things
that are round and you hit them on a bench block
with your hammer where you're hitting with your stamp,
it makes a dent on the opposite side.
That's really, really nasty
because of of the shape of
what it is that you're hammering into.
This absorbs the shock
and it dents in so
that you haven't damaged the opposite side of your metal
with half round and round objects.
This is called a third hand.
It is designed to hold things when you can't.
So if you wanted to hold a piece of metal onto another piece
of metal, you could hold it up with that.
It has a pair of cross locked tweezers in it.
It's adjustable probably 45, 60 degrees.
Um, It's a important tool
to have in your tool set no matter what kind
of stuff you're making, whether it's rings and bracelets
or other things, you always need to be able
to hold things without having yourself
and have yourself free to do other things.
So that my friends is a complete description
of the tools that are in the intermediate tool set.
We also have available a beginning tool set and,
and these tools are available
individually@silversmithingclasssupplies.com in groups
on sets there also,
but also probably where you,
you see the link for this video.
Thank you for watching.
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