JOURNAL · PROCESS

Forging the meteorite

A finished Vacamuerta ring takes six weeks. About 12 hours of that is hand work; the rest is waiting — for an etch to develop, for an alloy to set, for a weather window dry enough to do a final polish.

This is what those six weeks look like.

Week 1 — Tablet selection

A meteorite arrives in our workshop as an irregular fragment, somewhere between the size of a walnut and a fist. We weigh it, photograph it from all angles, and document the find region from the certificate of provenance.

Then we cut. A diamond saw, slow feed, lots of coolant. The cut produces a tablet — usually 2 to 4 millimeters thick, with the broad face of the slice exposed for the next steps. The fragment that remains is set aside for future tablets; nothing is wasted.

The tablet is rough at this stage — saw marks, dull surface, no hint yet of what is inside.

Week 2 — Surface preparation

The cut face gets a sequence of finer and finer abrasive treatments. We start with a coarse silicon-carbide paper and step down through grits — 220, 400, 800, 1500, 3000 — until the surface reads as a slightly cloudy mirror.

This is the most patient step. Pressing too hard on meteorite metal produces friction heat that can damage the crystalline structure. Each grit takes 20 to 40 minutes of hand work. By the end of the week, the tablet looks, briefly, like a featureless gray mirror. You would not yet guess what is inside.

Week 3 — The etch

The crystalline pattern emerges only when the polished surface is etched with a mild acid — typically a dilute solution of nitric acid in alcohol, called nital. We apply it carefully with a soft brush. The acid reacts differently with the metallic phases inside the meteorite, revealing a structure that formed inside the parent body as it cooled across cosmic time.

The pattern that surfaces is not invented. It was waiting there. We are the first humans to see it on this particular fragment.

After the etch, the tablet is rinsed in distilled water, neutralized in a weak baking-soda bath, dried, and sealed against further oxidation with a thin microcrystalline wax. The wax is breath-thin. It does not affect how the piece looks; it slows the future patina.

Week 4 — Building the setting

While the meteorite tablet is curing, we build its silver or gold home. For a Vacamuerta ring, this is usually a wide-band signet — the band is rolled or hammered to the desired profile, soldered closed, sized to the wearer, and a bezel is fabricated from sheet to fit the exact dimensions of the tablet.

The setting is hand-finished before the meteorite goes in: the band is polished, the bezel is filed clean, any decorative work (a hammered face, a cardinal cross stamp on the inside, a stippled texture under the bezel) is completed. Once the meteorite is set, the setting cannot be polished aggressively without risking the tablet.

Week 5 — Setting

Setting a Vaca Muerta meteorite tablet into silver or gold is delicate. The bezel is gently pushed over the perimeter of the tablet, mil by mil, with a curved burnisher — never hammered. Heat from soldering would damage the meteorite, so any soldering is done before the tablet is in place. The pressure is read by feel: enough to hold the tablet against any motion, not enough to crack the brittle crystalline edge.

Once the bezel is set, a final inspection: we look at the piece under a 10x loupe and check for any uneven gap between bezel and tablet, any stress mark on the surface, any small surface contamination from the setting process. If anything is wrong, we stop. Setting failures are real; we have refused to ship pieces over a tenth-of-a-millimeter gap.

Week 6 — Final finish, photography, and packing

The setting is given a final hand polish — areas around the bezel, the inner band, the edges. The piece is cleaned. We photograph it for the catalogue listing in our daylight north-facing studio. The certificate of authenticity is printed, signed, and packaged with the ring in our standard packaging.

The piece ships.

What this six weeks teaches

You cannot rush a Vacamuerta piece. The material was 4.5 billion years in the making; six weeks at the end is the smallest amount of patience that respects what was given.

This is also why these pieces are limited. Every fragment is different. Every tablet carries a different lattice. Every ring is, in the most literal sense, one of a kind.

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Browse pieces with Vacamuerta in the catalogue → /material/vacamuerta Commission a custom Vacamuerta piece → /custom-orders Read about our broader artistry → /artistry

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Los astros emergen adosados a su cuerpo, a su vida cotidiana y a su futuro. No hay lejanía, sino distancia con las estrellas, planetas, constelaciones y otros astros que pueblan esa tierra que es también el cielo.

Sonia Montecino Aguirre Premio Nacional de Humanidades y Ciencias Sociales, 2013

contratapa de Wenumapu — Astronomía y Cosmología Mapuche, Margarita Canio Llanquinao y Gabriel Pozo Menares, OCHOLIBROS, 2015 · ISBN 978-956-335-205-4 · read the source →

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