Wednesday 24 April 2013

New technology for jewellery making....


A 3D printing technology will be a "shape changer" for the jewellery industry, according to the leading UK supplier of precious metals to the trade.
The technology, called laser sintering, is being employed by Cookson Precious Metals to produce jewellery from computer designs.
Stella Layton, chief executive of the firm, said as a result, high-street shoppers could expect to see more personalised jewellery offered by retailers.
But others say the approach is relatively expensive, and the pieces produced still require significant work before sale.
Industrial heritage
Inside the highly secure Cookson factory in Birmingham's jewellery quarter many machines hark back to the firm's long heritage.
Large mechanical rollers shape pool-cue sized rods of silver, there's the sound of metal being worked, and the smell of gas in the air.
Laser sintering is different. The machine that Cookson currently use looks like a large piece of office equipment and sounds like a photocopier.
Behind a tinted glass panel 18-carat gold powder, laid down by a robot arm, sparkles as a laser fuses the metal into complex three-dimensional shapes, layer by layer.
Changing production
Laser sintering has been used in other industries for some time.
Stella Layton says the firm hopes to offer a service producing designs to order, using the machines supplied by German-based manufacturer EOS.
But she also hopes to sell smaller versions of the machine to the jewellery trade.
She sees several advantages to the technology: complex designs can be made rapidly, and can be quickly altered and produced.
Objects which hitherto had to be cast in solid metal can be manufactured as hollow shapes, reducing their weight and the amount of precious metal used.
"It's inevitable that this will become an integral part of our industry - as it has in the other industries it's been implemented in - but it's a shape changer to the industry," she said.
She says the firm has been in talks with major high-street retailers.
"They think it opens doors for customisation, so that you can take a piece and change it just for you," she said.
Craft skills
Cookson believes the sintering process, "puts the power in terms of the computer-aided design rather than the bench skills".
The Goldsmiths Company, which earned its royal charter in 1327, has seen a few changes in the techniques used by jewellers.
While apprentices still learn traditional craft skills, others working at the Goldsmiths centre are using 3D printers to produce jewellery.
Rupert Todd a designer based at the centre prints designs in wax, which are then cast in precious metal.
But Goldsmiths' Robin Kyte says the laser-sintering technique has its drawbacks.
Pieces, once printed, would still require finishing before sale, he said. "The cost of the fashioning is expensive," he explained.
And the process requires a significant amount of gold powder, more gold than might be required initially to make a piece using more traditional methods.
The 'toner' used in the laser sintering process is rather more expensive than that found in a laser printer cartridge. Eighteen-carat gold powder is worth about £18,000 a kilo.
Robin Kyte believes mastering the use of 3D printing and computer aided design, is just the latest addition to the skills jewellers should learn, and it won't, in his view, replace traditional craftsmanship.
"I think the craft skills will still be here, after 700 years they'll still be here," he said.

Wednesday 17 April 2013

UK Jewellery Awards....

The winners of the various categories will be announced at the UK Jewellery Awards gala dinner to take place in the Natural History Museum, London, on July 4, 2013.

This is a strange place to be holding jewellery awards, says METTLE.. 

It is where all the human remains from the distant past are stored. The annunaki are said to be kept there, by the late author Zecharia Sitchin in his latest and last book There were giants on the earth. The annunaki came from the planet Nibiru and settled here on earth 450,000 years ago in what is now Iraq, formerly Sumeria.

The land they colonised was called E.DIN, the `Garden of Eden' in the bible. They created the ADAM.U as a genetically modified version of themselves. They created us, according to Sitchin.

They lived for very long periods themselves - thousands of years - but they were not immortal. Some of them died on earth - the place the annunaki called ERIDU - home far away - the same word as earth incidentally. NIN.BANDA'S last resting place was at Ur. She was moved to London in the 1920s. The museum denies experimenting on her DNA.

She might have won some awards.
Look at her fine headdress.

The golden headdress of an annunaki goddess

The celebrants should drink a toast in her honour.


Wednesday 3 April 2013

Oxford jewellers robber restrained by public dies....

(BBC Report)
A man has died after he was restrained by members of the public as he attempted to rob a jeweller's store, police have said.
Police van outside covered market
The attempted robbery took place at Oxford's covered market
Two men targeted John Gowing Jewellers in the Covered Market, Oxford, in an attempted robbery on Saturday.
One of the men, Clint Townsend, 33, from Headington, Oxford, was restrained. He was taken to hospital where he died on Sunday.
Two men, aged 31 and 32, have been arrested on suspicion of robbery.
They were later released on bail.
A Thames Valley Police spokesman said two men wearing motorcycle helmets raided the shop at 09:15 GMT.
The second man managed to flee.
Det Supt Chris Ward, who is leading the investigation, said: "We know that the offenders arrived at the Covered Market on a motorcycle and then one of the men pushed the bike as they walked towards the jewellers.
'Boarded a bus'
"This motorcycle is a green Kawasaki ZX600, registration S618 UCL, and was stolen from an address in Botley Road at around 11:00 GMT on 27 March."
He added: "At this stage we believe that members of the public restrained one of the offenders, while the other ran away, leaving the Covered Market via Turl Street.
"As the man ran away, he discarded his helmet and some clothing we have subsequently recovered in Blue Boar Street."
He said it appeared the man then boarded a bus in the city centre and then got off in the area of St Clements.
Shopkeepers have described how they saw paramedics attempting to resuscitate a man as he was taken by stretcher to the ambulance.
South Central Ambulance Service said staff treated a man at the scene for a cardiac arrest and continued "life saving treatment" en route to John Radcliffe Hospital, in Oxford.
A post-mortem examination is set to be carried out to establish a cause of death.
It is believed that nothing was stolen in the raid.

Orkney jewellery firm Ortak in administration....

(BBC Report)
An Orkney-based jewellery firm that employs more than 150 people across Scotland has gone into administration.
Ortak visitor centre in Kirkwall
Ortak still has its headquarters and manufacturing base in Kirkwall
Ortak - which currently operates fifteen retail stores in Scotland - said difficult trading conditions had led to a downturn in fortunes.
It has appointed BDO as administrators, who will seek to sell the business as a going concern.
The company was launched in Kirkwall in the late 1960s, with its designs influenced by the local landscape.
It quickly grew to become one of the major names in UK jewellery manufacturing and currently employees 155 staff - including 44 in Orkney.
In a statement, Ortak said it had carried out an "exhaustive review of the business", which had come under pressure from the recession and the rising cost of raw materials.
It said it hoped administration would provide breathing space to explore the sale of the business as a going concern.
Local MSP Liam McArthur said: "Ortak is a strong, popular and iconic Orkney brand. Despite the difficult trading conditions at present, I hope that these attributes will enable the company to weather this storm".


"Let's hope Ortak find a solution quick and are able to weather this storm". 

Sunday 25 November 2012

Post Office reorganisation threatens jewellery trade


COMMENT -

Everything is being done to favour the big stores.  Free parking in out-of-town shopping centres, while town centre shops have to cope with rising rates and parking charges.

Now they're hunting internet shoppers and independents who depend on small deliveries from suppliers and don't run their own fleets of trucks.  It's the only way to stop them - make postal charges so high that it's not economic to ship small orders any longer.

That's their plan, but will it work?  Probably not.  Suppliers will always find a way to get round the blockages and hurdles put in our way.  Absorbing postal charges will be necessary, but the reach of the internet, whether business to business as we prefer at Curteis, or direct to the public, as more jewellers are either doing or thinking of doing, is unstoppable.


BRUSSELS PLOTS 'EU-WIDE' PARCEL SERVICE

What British mail vans could soon look like if the European Commission gets its way

What British mail vans could soon look like if the European Commission gets its way
Sunday November 25,2012

By Geoff Ho

THE cost of sending a package in theUK is set to shoot up under controversial European Commission proposals.
Its internal market commissioner Michel Barnier is poised to launch a consultation into the state of Europe’s delivery market which will also look at costs to consumers.
It is being hailed as a first step towards creating an EU-wide integrated parcel delivery market.
Barnier is expected to say that logistics groups are not providing a basic, reliable and affordable international package service for consumers.
They fear he will try to cap their charge to customers for delivering overseas packages and make the business unprofitable. Logistics group say they would then have to hike domestic charges to recoup the money lost on their international services.
An industry source said: “If the EC forces the cost of international parcel delivery, say you’re sending a package from London to Paris, to non-economic levels, delivery groups will have to make for up that and it’ll be through the domestic audience.
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Under these plans it could cost more to send something to Edinburgh than to Paris
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An industry source
“Charges should reflect the cost of international transit. We don’t want the EC to get us to the point where it costs more to send something to Edinburgh than it does to Paris.”

Tuesday 6 November 2012

Freeze Business Rates - or cut them

Thank you for emailing your MP in support of the Freeze Business Rates campaign. It would be great if you could also tell your friends, family and customers to do the same.

Many MPs will no doubt have seen for themselves how their local high streets and town centres have been affected by retail closures
- more than 1 in 9 shops on the high street are already lying empty - and it is important to remind them that the Government can do something about this. Every email really does count.

   
If you would like to find out more about the campaign, you can do so atwww.taxpayersalliance.com or www.brc.org.uk.

Once again, thank you for your support.

Yours sincerely,

Matthew Sinclair
Chief Executive, TaxPayers' Alliance

Stephen Robertson
Director General, British Retail Consortium

Chris Brook-Carter
Executive Editor, Retail Week

At last. Trench being dug bringing fibre optic cable

UPDATE 20.11.2012 - The line's gone dead.  No activity noticed since they dug the trench across our land.  BT are so boring and predictable.  Nothing will happen is the safest prophecy you can make where they are concerned.

We were promised the fibre optic link in July.  It's now November.  This time however we can see turf being dug and something is happening -  belatedly.  We can't let the pressure off just yet, however.  There have been no roadworks and digging up of the 'blocked ducting', as yet.

But was that just an excuse?  And the cable will be on its way for Christmas.

Internet speeds should go up to be fast enough to receive a photographic image of any product in a second, down from three seconds.  We can get on with our SEO website and recruit more online enquiries   Next year should see a continuation of our accelerating sales trend.  October was 30% higher this year than last, which even with an extra day in the month this year, is going some in the current market.  The catalogue and the packages launched in September, and hit the spot.

Assay figures have been trending down at about 15% year on year.  Does that mean we added 50% to our market share in a month?  Three more months will give us our sales trend with more confidence.