The bezel of the ring is the wider part and is usually thicker than the circle, which may contain a flat surface, usually with an engraved design, such as in a seal ring, or a gem. Ring is usually used to display the bezel on the top or outside of the fingers. The word may also refer to the setting of the bezel for the stone, which is a general term for the arrangement that holds the stone in place by lifting it around to the stone with circling lips and overlapping the edge of the stone, thus holding it in place. Modern bezel arrangements typically use metal bands that contain grooves and flanges (ie projecting lip) to hold the clock or gem crystals in their settings. This is the earliest method of setting gems into jewelry, in historic examples that are often made by leaving holes or slits in the ring with thin lips that are bent after a stone is inserted, holding it in place. The extension of the word used in this sense may refer to a circle that can be rotated on the hour or hour used to indicate certain data as the time elapsed.
Another type of bezel, less used in modern jewelry, is a "swivel bezel" where a bezel, probably only formed from a stone with a metal rod through it, can spin, and "bezel box", where the "box" or bezel cage shape, often sitting in the main ring ring, and possibly open at the top where there is a rock.
In a gem-cutting bezel can also refer to the oblique face of a stone that is cut around a flat "table" surface (another meaning of the word is the oblique face of the chisel).
More broadly, the bezel is found in equipment and equipment. This is the diagonal face at the end of the chisel, or similar tool, leading to the edge. In the vehicle, it is part of the vehicle bodywork that surrounds the headlamps or lights sein. On the phone, it is the back surface that frames the LCD screen.
Video Bezel (jewellery)
Pengaturan Bezel
In making a distinctive modern bezel frame, the bezel is formed into a size and shape of the gem and then soldered into place on the jewelry metal. The prepared stone is then placed into a bezel and the metal is pressed down on the edge of the stone, locking it in place.
Cabochon stone, an invisible gemstone, usually depends on a shallow angle that is cut to the side of the stone that helps the metal to stay in place. With clear velvet, like a diamond, a shallow groove is cut into the bezel itself. The corset or widest part of the gemstone is placed in the bezel, which is then pushed down on top of the corset. The bezel pressure above the edge of the diamond keeps it in place.
Setting a bezel to a diamond ring is also called a rub-over setting; they have diamonds surrounded by precious metal bands that fasten diamonds securely into place. Setting the bezel using an elevated collar type that encloses a diamond edge with a complete metal curve. This type of diamond ring setting is the safest fasteners for stone. Bezel settings also protect diamonds better than other types of settings, such as branch settings. Flush settings for diamond rings are variations on the rub-over or bezel settings. In a flush arrangement, the stone is placed into a hole and affixed to the bottom of the stone. The top of the diamond is extended over the base.
Maps Bezel (jewellery)
Benefits
One of the advantages of setting the bezel compared to the branch arrangement is that the diamond is more protected from unintentional shocks or blows, and tends not to allow diamonds to scratch or damage something that comes into contact with it. Setting the bezel is also safer, so the diamond is less likely to be dislodged by the user's activity.
Note
References
- Campbell, Gordon, "Bezel", Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online , Oxford University Press, Accessed July 4, 2013, Subscription required
Source of the article : Wikipedia