Forging may be the oldest metalworking technique. It is the classic method by which wire, rod, or ingots are hammer-formed into elegant, lightweight, flexible forms. Forging is essentially a two-stage process. First the metal is shaped by a series of sequential hammering operations, transforming it into an object that possesses varied structural cross-sections and fluid, graceful contours. Then the surface of the rough-forged form is refined by planishing, producing the characteristic reflective, subtly hammer-textured surface. This workshop will focus on light forging to produce small-scale jewelry.
Location/Venue: Penland School of Crafts
Original website page: https://tinyurl.com/ybjg8p4x
Cost/Fee: See registration
Material/Studio fee: ?
This organization's calendar: http://penland.org/workshops/
Instructor: John Cogswell - Studio artist; teaching: SUNY New Paltz (NY), Parsons School of Design (NYC), Haystack (ME); former director of jewelry and metalsmithing at 92nd Street Y (NYC); inducted into the National Metalsmith Hall of Fame; collections: Victoria and Albert Museum (London), Jewish Museum (NYC), Ackland Museum of Art (NC).