Gold Acheloios

Discussion in 'Ancient Coins' started by Nicholas Molinari, Nov 13, 2020.

  1. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    I have a special item to show off. This is a copy of a very famous Etruscan pendant in the Louvre. I was looking to get a 3D printer and randomly started searching to see if any cool ancient art featuring Acheloios was available. Turns out the Louvre has its piece scanned. That got me excited because I could print my own plastic copy—but then I remembered, I know a very talented master jeweler, so I asked him if he could possibly make this for me in gold. He assured me he could, and after several weeks, I just received my new pendant. It is 14k gold but he used a method called depletion gilding to bring about a more luscious yellow color, so more akin to 18-20k. This is a process in which the item is burned with a flame to leach the copper to the surface and then thrown in an acid bath. From what I understand, the acid bath removes the excess copper but leaves some at the surface adding a more yellow hue. He believes the Etruscans used this very method to make their gold more yellow.

    Anyway, I believe this is a step up from the traditional Italian horn and solidifies my placement among the true Acheloios fanatics.

    Please share anything relevant.
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    Last edited: Nov 13, 2020
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  3. Randy Abercrombie

    Randy Abercrombie Supporter! Supporter

    I don't know what looks better. The gold or the cigar. Been ten years since I allowed myself a fine cigar....
     
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  4. happy_collector

    happy_collector Well-Known Member

    Very nice pendant!
     
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  5. seth77

    seth77 Well-Known Member

    ... and the corduroy blazer completes the outfit nicely :cat::cat::cat:
     
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  6. Alegandron

    Alegandron "ΤΩΙ ΚΡΑΤΙΣΤΩΙ..." ΜΕΓΑΣ ΑΛΕΞΑΝΔΡΟΣ, June 323 BCE

    WOW, @Nicholas Molinari ... FANTASTIC!!!

    Well done, very cool! MAKE ME ONE! :D

    ACHELOUS

    upload_2020-11-13_14-28-37.png
    Sicily Gela AR Litra Horse-Achelous 0.63g 13mm 465-450 BCE HGC 2 p 373


    ETRURIA

    upload_2020-11-13_14-31-59.png
    Etruria Populonia AR 1 As 0.60g 10.0mm after 211 BCE Male Head Left - Plain Rev Vecchi 3 68-70 HN Italy 181 RARE


    MY FAV

    (Used to bring in several in my luggage from Hong Kong, before we were "able to") - YUMMY YUMMY

    MOLON LABE customs...
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    Last edited: Nov 13, 2020
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  7. Evan Saltis

    Evan Saltis OWNER - EBS Numis LLC Supporter

    Quite a piece! Looks great.

    and a nice cigar to seal the look! Love it :cigar:
     
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  8. Mat

    Mat Ancient Coincoholic

    That's cool, I like it. Congrats.
     
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  9. jb_depew

    jb_depew Well-Known Member

    Very cool! I just assembled a lost wax casting setup and am looking forward to doing fun projects like this.
     
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  10. PlanoSteve

    PlanoSteve Well-Known Member

    Yeah, I think that was already generally accepted! :D

    No Swisher Sweets on this one...:p:joyful::joyful::joyful::singing:

    Isn't technology great? So Nicholas, did he use a 3D printer to build the mold? It looks fabulous! :happy::singing:;)
     
  11. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    I’d be interested to know how you do—was the set up expensive?
     
  12. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    No, he 3D printed the pendant in plastic then made a traditional mold (which I have) from what appears to be rubber or silicone.
     
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  13. Andres2

    Andres2 Well-Known Member

    Congrats very nice Nicholas, Not coin , but my username related:

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    coin related:

    P1180632m best.jpg
     
  14. AncientJoe

    AncientJoe Well-Known Member

    Very cool, and a perfect way to flaunt your specialty without having to place a coin in jewelry (or rob the Louvre)!
     
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  15. jb_depew

    jb_depew Well-Known Member

    The big ticket equipment is an electromelt ($900), a burnout oven ($600 used), a vacuum casting machine ($1200), hot wax injector ($300 used) and a vulcanizer ($1000). Then there are some smaller tools, supplies and safety gear on top of that.
     
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  16. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    Not too bad. Please keep me (us) posted!
     
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  17. red_spork

    red_spork Triumvir monetalis

    This is awesome, really great idea and great work by your jeweler. I've downloaded a bunch of 3D scans of statues and things but have yet to actually print any of them. I'll have to try printing a few things and will have to look at what the Louvre has scanned as I had no idea they'd scanned any of their objects
     
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  18. Nicholas Molinari

    Nicholas Molinari Well-Known Member

    I bought the scan from a third party but my guess is it is available from the museum directly. It was very inexpensive.
     
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