| Adhere
pattern onto a 1-1/2" sq. piece of fine-silver sheet.

Using a center
punch or awl, tap a dimple in each area to be removed. This will keep
the drill from slipping when drilling the holes.
Drill holes, making
certain to keep the drill perpendicular to the surface.

Using a jeweler's
saw, cut out marked areas, making certain to keep the saw blade perpendicular
to the metal and staying just slightly inside the lines on the pattern. Filing
and sanding will take care of any excess metal left inside pattern lines.

(Note: Looking at the reverse side the side with no pattern it
will be impossible to see if the cutout of the design looks right and that the
opposite sides mirror each other.)
Cut out perimeter
of heart shape, staying just outside pattern lines.
Using whatever
needle files will fit, file the inside edges of holes perfectly perpendicular
(at right angles) to top and bottom surfaces of the metal. Also file the outer
edge symmetrical and smooth. Remove the pattern.
Cut sandpaper into
long, narrow strips and attach them to a board with a clamp or thumbtacks. Clamp
the board to your bench top so that pressure can be applied to the sandpaper strips
(the strips can also be held in a vise). Thread strips through the cut-out holes
and sand the interior edges smooth and straight. Also sand the perimeter symmetrical
and smooth.
After all holes
have been cut, filed, and sanded, sand both top and bottom sides of the entire
piece so they are perfectly flat and all nicks and dents are removed. Also sand
the edges smooth.

In a dapping block
or sandbag, gently dome the metal. Generally the convex side will be the side
people will see when the piece is worn.
Anneal the metal
in a furnace at 1,200†F. Pickle in a warm solution and rinse.
Prepare the metal
for enameling by scrubbing it with a brass brush or plastic scrubbing pad in soapy
water, making certain to rinse well. Dry.
Clean your enamels.
Grade-sift through a 325-mesh screen. Wash +325- mesh enamels in distilled water
until rinse water is clean.
Mix a 1:5 solution
of Klyr-fire and distilled water in a container.
Pour a small amount
of solution into a plastic cup with wet enamel, swirl, then pour off the Klyr-fire/
water solution.
Again, pour a
small amount of solution into the plastic cup with wet enamel. Enamel should be
completely covered by a small amount of liquid.
Using a spatula
or paintbrush, scoop a small amount of wet enamel from the cup and transfer it
to the cut-out holes. It is important to have enough water on the spatula or brush,
as these holes will be filled using the principle of surface tension (like a soap
bubble held in a wand). Insert the brush or spatula into a hole, touch the side,
and pull it around so that the enamel/liquid mixture spans the entire opening.
Add more enamel until the hole appears to be completely covered. Check the back
side to make sure the solution is not running out. If it is, wick some liquid
out and continue. Vibrate the piece by rubbing the ribbed side of your tool against
the piece to settle/compact the enamel powder. Turn the piece over and vibrate
it again to center the enamel in its opening. Carefully wick off excess water
with a piece of tissue or paper towel.
Repeat Step 16
until several holes are filled and the powder starts drying. (If previously enameled
holes start losing powder when the piece is vibrated, it is too dry.) Clean any
stray grains of enamel off the top of the metal with a small, damp brush or Clay
Shaper. Transfer the piece onto a trivet and place it on wire mesh, on top
of the furnace. Let it dry completely.
Fire the piece
at 1,400†F for 30-60 seconds. Exact timing depends on size of the kiln, accuracy
of pyrometer, how much heat is lost from opening the door, etc. Time your first
firing for use with subsequent firings. For the first firing, peek
until the enamel begins to darken and melt. Do not fire beyond orange peel,
in other words, do not fire to maturity. When enamel is completely melted and
the opening is not evenly filled, it will tend to blob up and cling to one side.
The enamel must hold together, yet still span the opening as much as possible.
If doing this method properly, any holes should get progressively smaller, until
enamel covers the entire opening.
Repeat the filling
and firing sequence, filling both new (unenameled) openings and partially filled
cells, until all holes are completely spanned by enamel. When there is a complete
covering of enamel in each opening, fire the piece for 75 seconds to mature, and
smooth out the enamel. Everything should come out filled and smooth. If some cells
have new holes in them, add enamel as before and fire to orange peel,
until cells appear completely spanned again. Once more, do a final
firing of approximately 75 seconds. When all holes are filled, the piece is ready
for finishing. (Note: There is no magic number of times for firing.
This project had approximately 20 firings. Just do whatever it takes!)
The goal now is
to remove stray enamel from the metal surface, raise a gloss on the enamel, and
polish the metal. Using a 200-grit diamond filing stick under running water, remove
excess enamel from the top of the piece. Progress to 400-grit.
Using finishing
papers, remove stray enamel from the back side of the piece.
Use 400-grit finishing
paper on a sanding stick to smooth and even out the front. Progress to 600-grit.
Wash well under
running water. With a glass brush and soap remove metal burrs and sanding debris.
Rinse well and dry.
If any cracks
have developed, add a few grains of appropriate colored enamel. Be certain to
keep the metal surface clean of stray grains of enamel.
Place the piece
on a trivet, on wire mesh, and thoroughly dry on top of furnace, as in Step 17.
Fire at 1,400†F for 75 seconds. This should give the enamel a nice, shiny, smooth
finish.
The metal can
be highly polished or left with a sanded, matte finish.
Add a purchased
split ring to the upper loop (or make a jump ring) and insert a chain. As a bonus,
when not wearing the plique-à-jour pendant, hang it in a sunny window and
enjoy its beauty.
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| 1 board, 6" sq.
Brass brush or scrubbing pad
Center punch or awl
Clamps
12 oz. container
Dapping block or sandbag
Diamond filing sticks, 200-grit and 400-grit
Drill bit, #61
Finishing tools
Firing tools
Flexible-shaft or hand drill
Glass brush
Jeweler's saw and #2/0 blades
Metal spatula with twisted handle
Needle files (flat, round, etc.)
Small paintbrush or Clay Shaper
Pickling tools
Small plastic containers
Sifter, 325 mesh with top and bottom
Dishwashing soap
Enamels (+325 mesh, transparent, leaded or unleaded; avoid very hard firing
enamels, artist's choice)
Fine-silver sheet, 16-gauge, 1-1/2" sq.
Klyr-fire
Rubber cement
Silver chain
Silver split ring
Thumbtacks
Tissue paper or paper towels |
For information on supplies, please see the Annual
Buyers' Directory.
Always ask for the MSDS (Material Safety Data Sheet) for any materials you buy,
which will give you reactivity, health hazard, and safe handling data. |
| Diane Echnoz Almeyda's love for jewelry
and desire to learn how pieces were made led her to take classes in bead stringing,
gem identification, and silversmithing. She loved the challenge of plique-à-jour
and worked over a year learning the technique. She continues her studies of new
techniques at workshops around the country, and shares her skills with others
by giving classes of her own. |

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