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STEP 1. Making the bezel.
Cut, solder, and shape your bezel to your stone. Solder your bezel to the center
of your plate using hard solder. I used a 30mm square piece of sheet.
STEP
2. Defining the shape of the clasp.
Using the marker, draw a line around the bezel, leaving a 1mm space from where
the bezel connects to the plate. Attach a 3mm triangle to each of the north, south,
east, and west points, 3mm out from the bezel line. Outline the shape of this
form. From the tip of the southernmost triangle, draw a line straight off the
plate. This is your starting line for cutting.
STEP
3. Cutting out the shapes.
Using a sharp, preferably new saw blade (dull blades tend to wander) and carefully
starting at the line you drew in STEP 2, cut through the
outer line to the tip of the southern triangle. Now cut the circumference of the
inner line, keeping the triangles attached to the inner form. The center piece
should now fall out and fit back in like a puzzle piece. Back out to the outer
line and repeat the same process. You should now have the 2 pieces that will form
the body of your clasp, the inner shape and outer shape.
STEP 4. Making jump rings.
Wrap a length of 14-gauge silver wire around a 3mm rod (I use a cut piece of a
nail, although wooden dowel rods work also), forming a spring form. Cut through
the length of your spring, creating individual rings.
STEP 5. Finishing the
outer shape.
Solder a jump ring to the south end of the outer shape where you cut through to
the inner shape in STEP 3. Solder the jump ring to the outer
shape, then solder the outer shape back together. File, sand, and polish.
STEP 6. Finishing the
inner piece.
Using hard solder, solder 2 20mm 14-gauge silver rods together. Solder a jump
ring to the end. With pliers, form a C-shaped curve on the opposite end of the
jump rings. Using easy solder, solder the butt end of the bar to the back of the
inner shape. Polish. Your clasp is now ready to be attached to a necklace.
Michael Boyd is a Salida, CO-based jeweler. He explained bezel making in Technically Speaking, November, 1998.
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