Wednesday 28 May 2014

Jewelry Design Catalogue History Modeling


Jewellery  Design Training  Academy
No 144/74, Eskay building, 3rd floor, 
Greams Road, Thousand Lights
Chennai,  Tamil Nadu,
India

Mobile:    +91-9444100081, 9840689781,+91-9840966467

info@jewelrydesignacademy.com
http://www.academyofdesign.in




Because of the high cost of rapid prototyping equipment and the high level of technical expertise required to reliably produce perfect parts, the trend is to use specialized third-party service bureaus.

We offer reduced time and cost for Jewellery designers and their clients with state-of-the-art technology. Our machines build wax models from computer files using thermoplastics that are perfect components for investment casting. 

In the past Jewellery design was greatly hindered by difficult communication between the customer and the jeweler. The only option for executing a Jewellery design was looking through a stock Jewellery design catalogue.

Whenever the customer had a vision or idea which was not realized in the finished piece of Jewellery the sale became very difficult.

With the aid of computer aided design (cad) model making has taken a wonderful new direction. With us Jewellery stores and Jewellery customers can actually see their idea before the creation stage. Other important benefits to cad Jewellery design is accuracy and affordability.

Your Jewellery design can now be manufactured with incredible symmetry because the wax model is created using our in house rapid prototyping (rp) machines.

Our systems reduce cost and time-to-market by translating CAD Designs into hard copy 3D models. These models are so accurate that designers can go beyond concept modeling to produce tooling grade patterns ready for casting or mold-making.

Jointly CAD/CAM allows the design of Jewellery using a computer (CAD) and creates an exact hard copy model of a Jewellery piece using a computer controlled manufacturing device (CAM). Our technicians utilize all file types compatible with any CAM device, which allows us to quickly generate a precise wax model ready for casting.

Stereolithography and these other hard model technologies are the future of the Jewellery industry. Leading jewelers effectively use CAM "service bureaus" that specialize in prototype output.

Jewellery design is the art or profession of creating, crafting, fabricating, or rendering designs for Jewellery. This is an ancient practice of the goldsmith or metalworker that evolved to a billion-dollar industry with the odyssey from ancient cultures into the machine age.














Jewellery design falls under the category of what is commonly known as "functional art", being art that can be worn or used.
History of the designing:

Before an article of Jewellery is created, it is typically rendered by a Jewellery designer, a professional who is trained in the architectural and functional knowledge of not only metallurgy but also design elements such as composition and wearability.

Once the article is rendered, the design is then constructed using the necessary materials for proper adaptation to the function of the object.

For example, 24K Gold was used in ancient Jewellery design because it was more accessible than silver as source material.

Before the 1st century many civilizations also incorporated beads into Jewellery.

Once the discovery of gemstones and gem cutting became more readily available, 2. the art of Jewellery ornamentation and design shifted. The earliest documented gemstone cut was done by Theophilus Presbyter (c.1070 - 1125).

who practiced and developed many applied arts and was a known goldsmith. Later, during the 14th Century, medieval lapidary technology evolved to include cabochons and cameos.

Early Jewellery design commissions were often constituted by nobility or the church to honor an event or as wearable ornamentation. Within the structure of early methods, enameling and repoussé became standard methods for creating ornamental wares to demonstrate wealth, position, or power.

These early techniques created a specific complex design element that later would forge the baroque movement in Jewellery design.

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