Cuff Bracelet Bending Tool -- for Inlay Cuff Course
This tool is made for students who are taking my inlay cuff bracelet class (and you can find more information on that inlay class here), but this tool is SO useful for any cuff that’s using a thick gauge and is hard to bend.
Instead of using a rawhide mallet and banging your cuff against a bracelet mandrel to shape your cuff—and marring the triangle wire in the process—this tool helps you easily get the perfect cuff shape each time.
While you could spend your time fiddling around with making this tool yourself—and spend over $35 on raw materials alone— you should be spending your precious time working on your creative projects.
This tool is made with red cedar and comes with 3 different PVC sizes for you to work from the largest PVC to the smallest to refine the curves of your cuff.
It does not come with a vise, but you’ll need one to hold the tool in place. This is the one I use: https://amzn.to/3PH4xbk
*When using the tool, I recommend placing a piece of leather or something similar between the oak and the cuff bracelet to provide a little padding and to keep the oak from getting chewed up. A piece of denim that can be doubled up for padding will be included as a bonus while supplies last.
This tool is made for students who are taking my inlay cuff bracelet class (and you can find more information on that inlay class here), but this tool is SO useful for any cuff that’s using a thick gauge and is hard to bend.
Instead of using a rawhide mallet and banging your cuff against a bracelet mandrel to shape your cuff—and marring the triangle wire in the process—this tool helps you easily get the perfect cuff shape each time.
While you could spend your time fiddling around with making this tool yourself—and spend over $35 on raw materials alone— you should be spending your precious time working on your creative projects.
This tool is made with red cedar and comes with 3 different PVC sizes for you to work from the largest PVC to the smallest to refine the curves of your cuff.
It does not come with a vise, but you’ll need one to hold the tool in place. This is the one I use: https://amzn.to/3PH4xbk
*When using the tool, I recommend placing a piece of leather or something similar between the oak and the cuff bracelet to provide a little padding and to keep the oak from getting chewed up. A piece of denim that can be doubled up for padding will be included as a bonus while supplies last.
This tool is made for students who are taking my inlay cuff bracelet class (and you can find more information on that inlay class here), but this tool is SO useful for any cuff that’s using a thick gauge and is hard to bend.
Instead of using a rawhide mallet and banging your cuff against a bracelet mandrel to shape your cuff—and marring the triangle wire in the process—this tool helps you easily get the perfect cuff shape each time.
While you could spend your time fiddling around with making this tool yourself—and spend over $35 on raw materials alone— you should be spending your precious time working on your creative projects.
This tool is made with red cedar and comes with 3 different PVC sizes for you to work from the largest PVC to the smallest to refine the curves of your cuff.
It does not come with a vise, but you’ll need one to hold the tool in place. This is the one I use: https://amzn.to/3PH4xbk
*When using the tool, I recommend placing a piece of leather or something similar between the oak and the cuff bracelet to provide a little padding and to keep the oak from getting chewed up. A piece of denim that can be doubled up for padding will be included as a bonus while supplies last.