Key Metal Forming Terms


Some of the nomenclature used in forming will be familiar but some might be new. Air pocket, Anticlast, Axis, Axial curve/Axial line, Bay, Bouge (booj), Compound curve form, Course, Cross peen, Furrow, Monocurve form, Planish, Radial Curve/Radial Axis, Stake and Synclast.

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By Betty Helen Longhi & Cynthia EidMore from this author

Some of the nomenclature used in forming will be familiar but some might be new. We will introduce the terms here and you will also find a glossary at the end of the book.

Heikki Seppä, Sculpture with Tesselation. Sterling silver, gold

Key Metal Forming Terms

  • Air pocket: The space between the metal being formed and the surface of the stake.
  • Anticlast: A planar form in which the axial and the radial lines are oriented in opposite directions. Anticlastic forms cannot hold water.
  • Axis: Any curved plane can be described by two perpendicular lines drawn across the surface of the plane. These lines are called axes. Each line is an axis; the plural is axes (pronounced AK-seez).
  • Axial curve/Axial line: The longer axis of a form.
  • Bay: The part of a sinusoidal stake where anti- clastic hammering is done. When looking at a silhouette of a sinusoidal stake, the bays are the concave curves.
  • Bouge (booj): [from the French bouger, "to move"]: Bouging is the process of smoothing a form and evening out irregularities. It can be in preparation for another course of formin, or prior to planishing.
  • Compound curve form: A surface in which both the axial and radial lines are curved. A bent tube has compound curves.
  • Course: The accumulated, methodical hammering from edge to center over an entire piece.
  • Cross peen: A hammer face that is long and nar- row, usually perpendicular to the handle.
  • Furrow: A type of monocurve in which the long axis of the form is straight, while the short radial axis is curved. Examples of furrows include cones and straight tubes.
  • Monocurve form: A singly curving surface in which one axis line is straight and the other is curved. A straight tube, for example, is a mono- curve.
  • Planish: The final hammering phase, when both the form and surface are given final form, usually with a steel hammer over a steel stake.
  • Radial Curve/Radial Axis: The shorter axis is the radial axis or radial curve.
  • Stake: A tool that supports metal when forming, bouging, or planishing. The form of the stake is a large factor in determining the form of the object being created. Sinusoidal stakes have a series of concave and convex curves designed for making anticlastic forms. They are shaped like a sine wave, and can be made of steel, wood or plastic. In this book we use the terms sinusoidal stake and anticlastic stake interchangeably.
  • Synclast: A planar form in which the axial and radial lines are oriented in the same direction. A synclastic form can hold water.
By Betty Helen Longhi & Cynthia Eid – © Brynmorgen Press 2013
A ll rights reserved internationally. Copyright © 2004 Brynmorgen Press Users have permission to download this information and share it as long as no money is made. No commercial use of this information is allowed without written permission from Brynmorgen Press
Buy The Book Creative Metal Forming
  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Brynmorgen Press (October 1, 2013)
  • ISBN-10: 1929565496
  • ISBN-13: 978-1929565498
  • Product Dimensions: 10.8 x 8.7 x 0.8 inches

Purchase your own copy of “Creative Metal Forming” today.

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Betty Helen Longhi & Cynthia Eid

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