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Gold and Gold
Alloys
From
Carly Wickell,
Your Guide to
Jewelry / Accessories.
FREE Newsletter.
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Metals Are
Used to Change the Color of Gold
Have you ever
been confused by the terms white gold, green gold, and rose gold? All real gold
is yellow, isn't it, so how do other colors fit in—are they imitations? They
aren't imitations at at all--they are alloys, new metals that are created by
combining two or more different metals.
Gold Alloys
Colored gold
alloys are just as "real" as their golden colored counterparts. Pure gold is
generally too soft to be used for jewelry, so other metals are nearly always
added to it, no matter which color of gold is being prepped for jewelry making.
Chances are the
ring on your finger is marked 18K, 14K, or 10K to indicate how much pure gold is
present in the mix. The K stands for karat, the system used to state how much
pure gold is found in an item.
Gold Karat
Markings
·
24K gold is pure gold.
·
18K gold contains 18 parts gold and 6 parts of another metal(s), making it 75%
gold.
·
14K gold contains 14 parts gold and 10 parts of another metal(s), making it
58.3% gold.
·
12K gold contains 12 parts gold and 12 parts of another metal(s), making it 50%
gold.
·
10K gold contains 10 parts gold and 14 parts another metal(s), making it 41.7%
gold.
·
10K gold is the minimum karat designation that can still be called gold in the
US.
Even 18K gold,
with its 6 parts of another metal, gives jewelers the opportunity to play around
with color.
White Gold
Alloys
·
Nickel can be mixed with gold to create a white (or gray) color; it can cause
dermatitis in people who are sensitive to nickel.
·
Palladium is another metal used to create white gold alloys. Related to
platinum, it is more expensive than nickel, but is less likely to cause allergic
reactions than nickel.
Rose & Pink
Gold Alloys
·
Copper is added to make gold-colored alloys, but additional copper creates pink
and rose tones -- the more copper, the deeper the effect.
Green Gold
Alloys
Greenish shades
are created by adding silver to gold.
Black Hills
Gold
Black Hills
Gold jewelry is a good example of colored gold alloys. Most Black Hills Gold
jewelry uses 10K or 12K gold alloys in shades of yellow, pink, rose, and green.
The photo on this page illustrates a few examples of this colorful gold jewelry.
Making alloys
isn't as simple as it might sound. Before they make an alloy, metallurgists have
to consider how the metals will react with each other. Adding too much of one
metal or another can make the mixture brittle, too hard, or difficult to work
with. Some ingredients could make the mix too soft.
Metallurgists
fine-tune their recipes to produce combinations that are attractive, durable and
can be successfully worked into pieces of jewelry. |