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  2. Repoussé and chasing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repoussé_and_chasing

    Chasing (French: ciselure) or embossing is a similar technique in which the piece is hammered on the front side, sinking the metal. The two techniques are often used in conjunction. Many metals can be used for chasing and repoussé work, including gold, silver, copper, and alloys such as steel, bronze, and pewter.

  3. Old Sheffield Plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Sheffield_Plate

    OSP Pair of table salts, the interiors gilded to prevent corrosion. 'Bleeding' of the copper can be seen on the rims. Old Sheffield Plate (or OSP) is the name generally given to the material developed by Thomas Boulsover in the 1740s, a fusion of copper and sterling silver [1] which could be made into a range of items normally made in solid silver. [2]

  4. Silversmith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silversmith

    Silversmiths saw or cut specific shapes from sterling and fine silver sheet metal and bar stock; they then use hammers to form the metal over anvils and stakes. Silver is hammered cold (at room temperature). As the metal is hammered, bent, and worked, it 'work-hardens'. Annealing is the heat-treatment used to make the metal soft again. If metal ...

  5. Hammered coinage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hammered_coinage

    Hammered coinage was the most common form of coins produced from the invention of coins in the first millennium BC until the early modern period of c. the 15th–17th centuries, contrasting to the cast coinage and the later developed milled coinage.

  6. Martelé (silver) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martelé_(silver)

    The work, a departure from machine-made commercial cutlery and hollowware, was named Martelé, from the French verb marteler, "to hammer".The line was made from 1896 through the 1930s by the Gorham Manufacturing Company of Providence, Rhode Island under the direction of Gorham's chief executive, Edward Holbrook, and his chief designer, William Christmas Codman who was brought over from England ...

  7. Guild and School of Handicraft - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guild_and_School_of_Handicraft

    The guild's work is characterized by plain surfaces of hammered silver, flowing wirework and colored stones in simple settings. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] [ 9 ] Ashbee himself often designed objects to be made of silver and other metals: belt buckles, jewellery, cutlery and tableware, for example. [ 12 ]