With the demand for quality,Shopping for Cheap stainless steel earring
at Wholeslae Fashion Stainless Steel. hand-crafted jewellery
increasing worldwide, Mintek's Kgabane Jewellery Programme is hoping to
fill a niche gap, combining recycled glass with gold and silver to
produce a unique African jewellery range.
It has produced a
prototype of items it hopes will be snapped up by local and
international markets, which at the same time will empower rural women.
Made especially for the Brics summit in Durban in March, the range
consists of 24ct gold and silver necklaces and earrings, woven copper
and silver bracelets, 18ct gold rings, silver cuff links and tie pins.
Miscellaneous
items like finely crafted letter openers, teaspoons, sugar spoons,
cheese forks and butter knives are also part of the range.
According
to the website, Kgabane, meaning precious, was an initiative of the
former Department of Minerals and Energy. The department is responsible
for championing the development of the indigenous precious metal
jewellery sub-sector.
Kgabane does this through fusing ancient
indigenous craft techniques and goldsmithing techniques to create a
product with a uniquely African signature.
Formed in 2001,
Kgabane has a number of programmes on the go, centred on the National
Rural Development Programme, which drives small and micro enterprises
with the aim of creating sustainable livelihoods in rural and poor
urban communities. This includes historically marginalised groups like
rural women, unemployed youth and the disabled. It contributes to
poverty alleviation and job creation.
"We haven't vigorously
gone out to sell the new range yet," says Bernice Dickson-Rabothata,
the head of jewellery design at Mintek. Established in 1934, Mintek is
the country's leader in providing minerals processing and metallurgical
engineering products and services to industries worldwide. The
jewellery programme consists of a production and training unit focused
on fine-tuning traditional craft skills and integrating them with
traditional goldsmithing techniques, at the same time developing viable
craft centres.
"The Kgabane product ranges were created by the
women of South Africa, drawing inspiration from the rich legacy of
indigenous adornment based upon traditional skills to be found
throughout South Africa's rural community," states the website.Shop the
best selection of stainless steel necklace
and pendants for men. For now the range will be showcased at
exhibitions, conferences and flea markets, says Nirdesh Singh, the
manager of Small-Scale Mining and Beneficiation at Mintek.
The
group is also experimenting with fashion jewellery, using recycled
glass to produce beads that are strung to create necklaces, bracelets
and earrings, as well as items like coloured glass tableware and
glass-beaded lampshades.
"With the gold and silver, the glass
beads have been given value," says Christina Magaseng, the head of bead
design at Mintek. She says it takes five hours to make a necklace.
Beads
have been made in Africa for centuries, using clay, ostrich shells,
bone, copper, iron, charcoal, seeds, horn, ivory, brass and gold. But in
the late 1800s Arab,you'll want to consider make your own bobblehead. Chinese and Portuguese traders brought glass beads to Africa. Later,Two Tone stainless steel ring
with Lords Prayer and Cross Design Sizes. plastic beads found their way
to the continent, and the traditional methods of beadwork were lost.
Mintek
recognised that these skills needed to be revisited, and developed a
process that uses recycled glass bottles to make beads that resemble
traditional African beads for jewellery making.we sell dry cabinets
and different kind of laboratory equipment in us. The idea was to take
the manufacture of the beads to rural communities, to create jobs and
alleviate poverty. The initiative is called Amaso, which is the Xhosa
word for jewellery.
Two types of beads are made - transparent
and opaque. The former are made from fragments of broken beer bottles
or windowpane glass, which is melted in a gas flame and formed into
beads of different shapes and sizes. Opaque beads are made from waste
beer bottles, which are milled to a fine powder using a bottle crusher.
Together with other additives, the powder is made into a paste. This
is then individually moulded by hand into different shapes and sizes
and placed on stainless steel wires coated with kaolin clay before
being fired in a kiln.
Mintek, together with a number of other
organisations, has established several bead and jewellery projects that
are owned entirely by rural women. Small businesses have been set up
in Rustenburg and Taung in North West; Dundee, Botha's Hill and Ulundi
in KwaZulu-Natal; O'Kiep in the Northern Cape; Qwaqwa in the Free State;
and, East London in the Eastern Cape.
Mintek has ambitious
plans, which include training street bottle collectors to learn how to
crush the raw material and make beads. Favourite beer bottles being
recycled are Amstel, Castle Lite, and Hansa. Funding at the moment
comes from local municipalities, the Department of Arts and Culture,
mining houses, the National Lottery and the National Development
Agency.
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