For a Freelance Jewellery Designer or Part Time Jewellery Designer Opportunity in Chennai Branded Jewellery Retail Stores
For recruitment of Ms. Uthra Vyas Our Professional Manual Jewellery and Rhino 3D CAD Designer
Contact us on
Chennai Aesera Jewellery Design Training Academy
No 144/74, Eskay building, 3rd floor,
Greams Road, Thousand Lights
Chennai-6, Tamil Nadu, India Mobile: +91-9840966467,+91-9444100081, 9840689781
Polished Diamond Grading Courses in Chennai from 15th June to 19th June Morning 10 AM to 4 PM . PLEASE SHARE WITH YOUR FRIENDS ON YOUR FB WALL
For Further Details Contact Chennai Jewellery Designing Making Software Jobs Training…
AESERA ACADEMY OF JEWELLERY DESIGN ,
144/74, 3rd floor, Eskay Building, Opp: Chennai Telephones
Above COOL CLUB GARMENT STORES ,
Land Mark : TVS KOHINOOR SHOWROOM & PRESTIGE PALLADIUM BAYAN ,
GREAMS ROAD , THOUSAND LIGHTS
CHENNAI – 6 , INDIA
Contact :+91-9444100081 , +91-9840966467 , +91-9840689781
info@jewelrydesignacademy.com
Polished Diamond Grading Courses in Chennai from 15th June to 19th June Morning 10 AM to 4 PM . PLEASE SHARE WITH YOUR FRIENDS ON YOUR FB WALL
For Further Details Contact Chennai Jewellery Designing Making Software Jobs Training…
AESERA ACADEMY OF JEWELLERY DESIGN ,
144/74, 3rd floor, Eskay Building, Opp: Chennai Telephones
Above COOL CLUB GARMENT STORES ,
Land Mark : TVS KOHINOOR SHOWROOM & PRESTIGE PALLADIUM BAYAN ,
GREAMS ROAD , THOUSAND LIGHTS
CHENNAI – 6 , INDIA
Contact :+91-9444100081 , +91-9840966467 , +91-9840689781
info@jewelrydesignacademy.com
1. Developing Jewellery Designs created by the Design team for CAD / CAM
2. Interpret each design well in 3d based on a correct understanding of technical drawings or views issued by Designers specially with the right gold and diamond weight specifications..
3. Research on key trends in International jewellery brands that will influence the Indian market
.4. Work closely with design and merchandising teams.
Desired Candidate Profile
1. Passionate about CAD, 3D and jewellery
2. Team work: open communicative personality with multiple interests, transparent and cooperative team player
3. Open to feedback, willingness to learn new computer software and other skills
4. Working under high pressure to meet delivery timelines
5. Thorough experience on CAD softwares like Matrix, Rhino, Keyshots, etc
Jewellery designing is an art – a unique and intriguing art. But this art was closely guarded earlier, confined to select few artisans or ‘kaarigars’ and handed down generation to generation.
Now with the recent boom and opening up of the branded market, jewel design is flourishing like never before. As a leading job coach rightly states, “It’s a fine era to consider jewellery designing as a career preference!”
And its no longer restricted to designing traditional gold and diamond pieces either. This ever-growing industry offers immense opportunities for exclusive, contemporary, stylised and designer jewellery in keeping with latest fashion trends. Not to forget striking prospects in semi-precious and costume jewellery as well.
In fact, the demand is so high that it makes jewellery designing an almost evergreen career path……
All in a Day’s Work
Jewellery design is one of the most creative professions where you get to craft innovative jewels right from conceptualising the style and design, drawing sketches, fashioning detailed drawings to preparing structural models, computer simulations or sometimes even a full-scale prototype.
This requires you to understand the market, identify the consumer needs, visualise ideas to suit the demand and create impressive presentations to communicate your idea clearly.
But the job doesn’t end at designing. Jewellery artists also have to be hands-on involved in the actual manufacturing process where craftsmen use specialised hand tools and equipments to turn the designs into exquisite, flawless pieces!
Getting Started
Formal training is essential for refining this creative skill. Both Bachelor and Masters Degree of Fine Arts include jewellery designing. Or you can opt for a diploma or certificate course offered by numerous specialist institutes in India. There are long-term, short-term and even online/distance learning programs varying from a few weeks to 1-2 years. They will set you back from Rs.10,000 to a lakh plus depending on the type of program.
These courses impart knowledge about drawing skills, design themes, colour science, diverse kinds of stones, environmental exposure, form and space, presentation, jewellery costing and fashion trends. Some even include computer-aided programs for designing jewellery and accessories. CAD eliminates tiring efforts of umpteen redesigning on paper and imparts flexibility of exploring numerous alternatives.
Not only do you hone your designing skills, but also learn the basics of jewellery making techniques right from metal textures, stone settings, casting, cutting, polishing to even engraving, enamelling and electroplating. It also includes identification of gems/diamonds and testing quality of precious metals/stones. In fact, this rudimentary knowledge is crucial for becoming a good designer.
Apart from designing, you can also choose to specialise in other streams like jewellery manufacturing, gemology, diamond grading, etc.
What it takes?
Generally, a school level or 10+2 background is essential. An art background or an internship with a design studio/jewellery designer can give you a head start in the competitive industry.
What it takes is a penchant for jewels and a flair for design. A creative and imaginative mind with an eye for detail and colours is essential. You have to be meticulous as nothing but perfection is acceptable. Being able to work with patience and concentration is also important.
It goes without saying that you have to be well-versed with the fashion scene and stay updated with the changing trends.
Career Prospects
People not only pay you to design jewellery but also offer a plethora of career options in jewellery design houses, fashion houses, export houses, antique/art auction houses et al. Big names like Tanishq, Swarvoski, DeBeers and D’damas regularly scout for remarkable talent.
You can choose to work as an in-house artist, freelance or be a self-employed entrepreneur. Or, specialise in any particular aspect of jewellery making like goldsmith, bench jeweller, lapidary, quality assurance consultant, diamond and gemstone grader, etc. But as vacancies in this field are not advertised much, you have to build and maintain a good network in the industry.
Generally, jewellery designers start small by designing for the mass market and then move to custom designs as they gain prominence. And once you build your own inimitable style, you can even launch your own line or open your store!
Starting pay packets range from Rs. 10,000 – 12,000 depending on the type of work and pay packages/incentives keep rising with top designers raking in lakhs a month !
With talent, skill, initiative and experience on your side, there is literally no limit to what you can achieve! So, unleash your imagination and love for all that glitters by converting your passion into a fascinating, rewarding and fulfilling profession!
A Brief History of Gold
The history of gold has been dated back to the Egyptians. Gold was a representation of wealth and power. Gold has destroyed nations because of it has always been considered precious quality. For centuries now gold has been the obsession of mankind, regardless of the era.
Archeological evidence suggests gold was first used in the Middle East where the first known civilizations began. On fact, the oldest piece of gold jewelry is Egyptian jewelry that had been found in the tomb of Queen Zer. These gold pieces are the oldest examples found of any type of jewelry from the third millennium BCE. Throughout the Egyptian era, tombs were raided in search of gold and other fine treasures. One however, was left undisturbed, the tomb of Tutankhamen. Inside was the largest collection of gold and jewelry in the world to include a gold coffin that had the intricate detail of Egyptian
craftsmanship and gold working.
Gold Jewellery buying tips for Indians
As a smart buyer, you may keep the following things in mind when you deal with jewellery shops.
First, if you are exchanging gold (selling old ornaments and buying new) make sure that you are getting the full price of what you are selling. i.e. As long as you are selling 22K gold, the shop may not reduce any price but give you the actual market price of the 22K gold by its weight. There are some jewellers who charge melting charges, handling charges or whatever they may call it but never ever fall into that trap
Each and every piece has to be weighed separately and tested for purity using the electronic purity tester while selling. i.e. if you have a pair of ear rings, test them separately
Ask for the current gold price on your purchase day and their standard making charges before commencing your shopping
Check for the BIS hallmark on the inner or back side of each of the pieces you are buying
Ask for the ‘wastage charges’ for each of the pieces that you are picking and be prepared for the negotiation
You may start by asking the ‘BEST wastage charge’ as per the salesman. Negotiate with him and tell him that you are serious about the purchase if he’s forthcoming in terms of a reduced rate. He will mostly give one percent less. Take it to the store manager or supervisor at the next level to get 2-3% negotiation done. You WILL definitely get 2-3% discount if you are making bigger purchases. If you are gone there just to pick a little 2gm earring or so, you better not negotiate much. But if you are on wedding or engagement shopping, you may save a lot by negotiating
Making Charges, Gold Wastage charges etc
As I mentioned earlier, there has to be certain metals added to pure gold to make it tough and good enough to make jewellery. This is the first level of added cost to the making process followed by the actual making charges to convert the gold bars or blocks into beautiful jewellery patterns.
The making charges (‘Panikkooli’ for Malayali friends) is the cost of converting raw gold into jewellery. This is usually expressed in Rupees pergram of gold. In most cases, the making charges per gram of gold vary from 25 to 35 rupees. Compared to the price of gold today, this is a negligible number.
However, there is another scary number called the ‘wastage charges’ (‘Panikkuravu’ as Keralites call it). In the good old times, the goldsmiths used to make gold jewellery by melting gold, cutting and shaping it into tiny pieces and join them together to make great handmade gold jewellery. In this process they ‘claimed’ that certain quantity of gold go wasted though these goldsmiths are actually smart enough to collect or retrieve most of the gold without wasting any. Nowadays, the gold ornaments are made in advanced machines and nothing really go wasted. However, this tradition of calculating ‘wastage’ continues and this is expressed in terms of ‘percentage’and they charge that to the customers.
The amount charged to the customers for the ‘wastage’ caused is known as the ‘wastage charges’. It’s quite ridiculous that there’s no norm for this wastage charge component and that’s exactly where your jeweller cheats you. The wastage charges typically vary from 10% to 18% in most shops while it’s quite possible to have it as high as 20% or 24% or even as low as 8%. Unfortunately, nobody knows why certain ornaments has to have more wastage than some others as claimed by the jeweller.
What is gold carat
When people buy gold jewelry in the store, the seller often describes it in terms of karats (abbreviated kt or K). The gold jewelries are made with different karat, such as 10 karat, 12 karat, 14 karat, and 18 karat. High karat gold jewelries are more expensive. Well, what exactly does the “karat” mean?
What is the karat?
Karat is a unit of purity for gold alloys, rather than weight. The word “karat” is from the carob seed, which was used as balance scales to measure the weight of gold in ancient Asian bazaars.
What is Gold Karat?
Since the pure gold is too soft to make exquisite jewelries. Therefore, the gold jewelries are almost alloy which are mixed with other metals, such as silver, copper, or zinc. Pure gold is 24 karats. A unit karat of gold is equal to 1/24 part (4.1667%). The gold karat shows how many parts of gold and how many parts of other metals in a gold jewelry. The following chart shows the differences between the different karats, and also shows the percentage of gold and other metals.
Karats gold percentage Other Metal percentage
24kt gold 100.00% other metal 0.000%
22kt gold 91.60% other metal 8.4%
18kt gold 75.00% other metal 25%
14kt gold 58.5% other metal 41.500%
10kt gold 41.7% other metal 58.300%
6kt gold 25% other metal 75%
As I mentioned, gold is a relatively soft metal, so high-karat stuff are often easily damaged. A 24 karat item is generally reserved for display or ceremonial use. In the stores, most gold items have a karat rating in the range 9 to 18. In the US, the minimum karat value for gold jewelry to be sold is 10, but in the UK 9 karat is more common. In additional, gold purity does not affect its weight! Different color of gold are mixed with different other metals. For example, gold mixes copper is called red karat gold.
What’s the difference between Karat and Carat?
We are often confusion over the differing use of “carat” and “karat”. The Karat is a gold unit for purity, and Carat is a unit for mass which is used for measuring the weight of gemstones and pearls (1 carat is equal to 200mg). However, carat and karat are usually used interchangeably in some countries.
How to test the purity of gold?
There are two common methods to test gold for its purity, Acid Test Kits and Electronic Testing Kits. However, any acid testing will lose some small amount of gold.
Important Points To Keep In Mind While Purchasing Gold Jewellery
Look For :-
Jewellery Showroom selling BIS Hallmark Jewellery.
Buy:- Hallmark Jewellery only. It assures the mark of purity/fitness.
Ask For: – Cash Memo /Invoice which will help BIS to resolve complaints (if any).
Gold pricing formula/Purchasing Tips
purchasing gold jewellery is:
Actual cost of gold as per the day’s rate + Wastage charges + Making Charges + VAT if any. In addition, if your jewellery has any precious stones, that cost will be added up as well.
Cost of Gold Jewellery = Making Charges + Wastage Charges + Cost of Stones, if any + VAT
For example, assume that the gold rate is at Rs.2500/- per gram for 22 Karat gold. When you buy a 10 gram gold chain with the making charges at 35 rupees per gram and wastage charges at 12%, the following will be the calculation to arrive at the final price:
(1) Cost of gold alone = 10 * 2500 = 25,000/-
(2) Making charges = 10 * 35 = 350/-
(3) Wastage charges = 12 * 25,000 / 100 = 3,000/-
The total cost before VAT = 28,350/-
If the VAT is at 1% that becomes 28,633.50/-
Recently the jewellers have started representing the Wastage Charges and Making charges together as VA or ‘Value Addition’.
What is Karat, 916, BIS Hallmark etc?
Karat (NOT Carat) is a measure of the purity of gold. 24 carat is considered pure gold.
Since pure gold is too soft (and hence would easily bend) to make any jewellery out of it, there has to be certain other metals such as copper, silver, cadmium etc added to make it strong, shine and with the desired shade. Based on how much extra metals are added, the Karat value of the gold reduces to 22Kt, 18Kt, 14Kt or even 10Kt.
For example, 18K gold is 75% pure gold (i.e. 18/24) where as 14K gold has only 58% real gold in it.
In India, 22K gold is considered the most valuable for jewelleries and hence it has more resale value as well. 22Kt gold jewellery means it has 22/24 percent pure gold in it or in other words 91.6% purity.
And this is what is called 916 gold (symbolizes 91.6%).
BIS Hallmark Symbol
In order to make sure that the jewellers actually sell 91.6% pure gold (when they claim to sell 22Kt gold), the Bureau of Indian Standards (BIS) made it mandatory to emboss a hallmark on all standardized gold jewellery. And such a jewellery is known as a BIS Hallmark jewellery. Before this standardization, many jewellers and goldsmiths used to cheat people with below 22Kt gold while they claimed to sell good quality 22K gold. I figured this out while selling some old gold jewellery recently.
[BIS Hallmark is NOT just for 22Kt gold. You may take a look at the BIS site for all BIS components]