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Make your own enamel jewellery with specialist jewellery enamelling supplies designed for bright colour, glossy shine and seriously satisfying results. From vibrant enamel powders and decorative wafers to copper blanks, kilns and essential accessories, this range has everything you need to create bold pendants, charms and keepsake pieces.
Jewellery enamelling is where powdered glass meets metal and becomes magic: the enamel fuses in the kiln to form a smooth, durable finish that catches the light beautifully. Whether you’re new to enamelling or upgrading a home studio, you can experiment with opaque and transparent colour effects, layering, stencilling and textured chips to make every piece uniquely yours.
Explore enamel jewellery workshops, stock up on refill powders, and choose copper blanks in single pieces or value packs for batching gifts and collections. It’s a brilliant way to level up your “make your own jewellery” skills— one glossy, colour-packed firing at a time.
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Jewellery enamelling is the process of fusing powdered glass (enamel) onto metal—often copper—using a kiln. The result is a glossy, hard-wearing, colour-rich finish that’s perfect for pendants, charms and decorative pieces.
Enamel jewellery example (Teresa Kent, Lappelli Studio)
You’ll typically need enamel powders, a metal blank (such as copper), a sifter/sieve, a firing stand or stilt, tongs and heat-safe gloves, plus an enamelling kiln. Add wafers/chips or stencils for texture and pattern, and you’re ready to create everything from solid colour to layered effects.
Colourful enamel powders for fusing onto metal
Below is a beginner-friendly process for enamelling a small copper blank. (Key tip: don’t touch the cleaned metal surface with your fingers—skin oils can affect the finish.)
You can use stencils for patterns, blend colours for an ombré effect, or sprinkle wafers/chips over the powder for raised texture.
Cromartie Enamelling Kiln CEK4 available here
Opaque powders are often easier for beginners because they give solid coverage. Use clean paper per colour, reuse excess powder for backs where suitable, and focus on a smooth surface as your main “done” indicator—some colours can shift slightly as they cool.
If you would be interested in attending enamelling workshops at Cromartie, email enquiries-cromartiehobbycraft@outlook.com to register your interest and be added to the mailing list for future events.
Enamel jewellery by Teresa Kent, Lappelli Studio
Cromartie Hobbycraft Limited Park Hall Road Longton Stoke-on-Trent Staffordshire ST3 5AY Tel: 01782 319435
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