| Burnishing.
Agate burnishers work best for thinner foil, curved steel burnishers for thicker
foil. Gold will stick to steel if it gets too hot. Quench steel burnishers in
water. Do not quench agate burnishers, as they will fracture. Use the belly, or
the section of the tool with the broadest area of contact.
Work on a heat-resistant
surface. Place a sheet of steel, nickel, or brass on top of the burner. Adjust
the hotplate to 500-700°F. An oven thermometer can be used to find the exact
temperature. However, the correct temperature can easily be found through experimentation
with a practice piece. Steel will start to turn blue when it reaches the correct
temperature for keum-boo. Mark the optimal control setting for future reference.
Use gloves while
working over heat. Carefully place the dry piece from Step 4 on the hot steel
plate. Hold the work securely with tweezers. Tack foil in place by pressing lightly
in the center of each shape. Starting in the center of each gold shape, burnish
the entire piece. Use light, even pressure and burnish in a circular motion. Work
from the center toward the edges to avoid trapping air bubbles between the gold
foil and the silver. Give special attention to each edge to be sure it is tacked
down.
 Remove
the piece from the heat and allow it to air cool. Do not quench! Place the piece
on ceramic tile to speed cooling.
Use an Optivisor® and X-Acto® knife to examine the edges of the foil
for a secure bond. Surface should be smooth without bumps or irregularities.
Remove any small
bubbles with additional burnishing on the hotplate. Pierce any large bubbles before
reburnishing. To repair tears, cut a small piece of foil to cover the tear and
burnish as usual. Carefully sand the surface to even out the gold thickness if
necessary.
Fabricating
the pillow pendant.
Traditionally, all soldering is done on a piece before the keum-boo process is
performed. It is possible to solder on a piece after youve applied the gold,
but if its overheated during soldering, bubbling may occur. Additionally,
too much heat can cause the gold to diffuse into the surface and visually disappear.
Be very careful not to overheat during soldering.
Coat the finished keum-boo disks with firecoat. Place them on a charcoal block
and anneal by heating evenly with a torch, using reducing flame, until the silver
appears dull red in color. Beginners can turn off overhead and bench lights to
see this subtle color. The annealing temperature is higher than the temperature
for depletion guilding but still far lower than the soldering temperature. Do
not overheat. Allow the piece to air cool. Pickle until the surface becomes bright
white. Remove them from the pickle, neutralize, rinse and dry.
 Place
one silver disk with the keum-boo side down into the largest depression in the
wooden dapping block. Use the dapping punch to dome the disk.
Start at the edge and work in a circular pattern around the edge of the disk.
On the second pass, bring the punch closer to the center and work your way around
again.
Repeat until you reach the center of the circle. Repeat with the second disk.
Steel dapping blocks and punches can be used to create more volume.
Make a guide
with a center punch and drill a hole in one half of the dome to allow gases to
escape during soldering. Remove the bur.
Sand or file
the edges of each dapped circle until the seams meet perfectly when assembled.
The smaller jump ring will be used as a bail at the top of the pendant. Measure
the outside diameter of this jump ring with a divider. Transfer this measurement
to each half of the pendant by scribing lines with both divider legs.
Coloring the metal with a thick permanent marker before scribing makes the
lines more visible. In the edge of each dapped disk, file a half round opening
toward the inside of each scribed line with a round needle file. When filing is
complete, the jump ring should rest between the two pillow halves, allowing the
seams to meet without gaps.
 Carve
a recessed area into your charcoal block as a seat for the pendant. Coat the two
dapped disks and jump ring with firecoat. Place the bottom half of the pendant
on the charcoal block, seam up. Squeeze a generous amount of easy silver paste
solder around the inside of the seam on the top piece.
Paste solder contains flux so additional flux is unnecessary. Remove excess
solder from the outside of the piece before soldering.
Using solder to hold it in place, align the jump ring and the top disk with
the notches on the bottom half. Heat evenly with a neutral flame to solder.
As soon as the solder flows, draw the solder pick along the seam to remove
oxides. Air cool. If the joint is good, the seam will appear as a shiny silver
line. Any dark areas indicate where the solder did not flow. If necessary, apply
additional solder to the seam and reflow. Boil it in water to remove the flux.
Carefully sand
the solder seam with 400- and 600-grit sandpaper until it blends into the piece.
If you have
foil near the seam, be careful not to sand the gold.
Give the piece a satin finish with a brass brush and soapy water or polish
it with a polishing cloth or papers.
The piece can be darkened with an oxidizing agent, such as liver-of-sulfur.
Attach your finished piece to a rubber neck cable with the larger jump ring and
enjoy wearing your new keum-boo creation.
Resources: Manufactured 4" x 4" sheets of 24K keum-boo
foil, 0.01mm thick, and agate burnishers can be purchased from AllCraft.
|