Rhode
Island School of Design also known as RISD.
Etienne
Perret earned his Graduate Gemologist Degree from the Gemological Institute
of America also know as GIA in the early 1980s through their extensive distance
learning program. There is an extensive selection of classes that can be
taken by correspondence. They have every subject from Gem Identification
to Diamond Grading. If you can devote your full attention and go to their
Carlsbad California campus I highly recommend going and taking the classes
there. However if you are not able to go and must study from Home their
correspondence program is the finest in the world.
learning center for those who want to learn more about the various aspects
of jewelry making. It has short-term classes for those who can only spend
a few days at a time. For jewelers that can spend a few weeks it has a master
goldsmith program that teaches a complete set of jewelry making skills.
Since 1979, thousand of people from around the world have come to take our
classes. From beginners just starting out to bench jewelers with decades
of experience, there is something in our program for everyone. 415-391-4179
Maine
College of Art
Ganoksin
Ganoksin is an amazing web site devoted to the art of making
jewelry. It is run by Dr Steven Aspler, also known as Hanuman. He and a
loyal group of participants have put together the world's largest collection
of jewelry articles that are free to download. The subjects range from technical
how to article to a large gallery of jewelry designs. One of the best parts
of Ganoksin is "Orchid" the busy forum where crafts people share their jewelry
making experiences.
Metalcyberspace![]()
Created in 1999 by Susan Sarantos metalcyberspace is a labor
of love.
Her intention is a one-stop info site for research about contemporary jewelry
designers, metal artists and the metalsmithing field. After years of networking
people together from different groups in the past, she realized once she
got online that the Internet was the perfect venue for what she had always
dreamed.
Susan Sarantos has an archive in her studio of 200 binders (and growing)
with information on anything jewelry related, which she has collected over
the past twenty years. Books, magazines and catalogues also take up a huge
section of her space. My file collection is sorted into categories, which
is the basis for this web structure.
