Peter Russell:
Biography of a Master Craftsman
Peter Russell spent seven years as an apprentice hand engraver at one of the top firms in London’s prestigious Hatton Garden in the 1950’s. So strict and thorough was his apprenticeship that he wasn’t allowed to actually produce an item until the fourth year of his studies!
Peter went on to create a successful engraving business thirty-seven years ago that continues to thrive today. He trains his staff to embrace various
engraving methods to suit different types of material, from sandblasting to diamond point engraving of metals.
Peter’s expertise in the engraving trade and highly-specialised hand engraving has provided Peter Russell Engravers with its excellent reputation. From a business point of view, Peter can engrave objects that no machine can, such as freehand designs and lettering, specializing in hand engraving inside rings and bangles. However, it is in his artwork that Peter’s craftsmanship becomes apparent, particularly when his choice of materials extended to include glass as well as gold and silver.
A member of The Guild of Glass Engravers, Peter has won many awards for his work on cased glass (layered coloured glass). This slow and meticulous work is a labour of love for Peter, but it could hardly have gone unnoticed, as the pictures of his work demonstrate. Amongst other awards he has won the Worshipful Company of Glass Sellers Award at the Castle Howard exhibition in 1995 and numerous awards at Goldsmith's Hall, London for his Cameo Cutting skills.
He has also completed various commissions for Rolls Royce and, possibly most impressively, was invited in 1997 to 10 Downing Street. The Prime Minister’s headquarters holds the best of British art and craftsmanship but the green cased goblet engraved with the Royal Crest that Peter engraved was the first piece of glassware ever to be accepted there. We hope that you enjoy these images of some of Peter’s work.
Click on each image for a closer look.