What Is Jewelry Gauge?
Gauge is a numbering system used to describe the thickness or diameter of wire and sheet metal. In jewelry making, gauge is commonly used for wire, bezel strip, jump rings, ear wires, sheet metal and structural fabrication parts.
The confusing part is that gauge numbers work backwards: a smaller gauge number usually means thicker metal, while a larger gauge number means thinner metal.
AWG To Millimeter Conversion Chart
This chart uses common AWG / Brown & Sharpe gauge values often used by jewelers and metalsmiths. Use it as a practical bench reference for wire and sheet thickness planning.
| Gauge | Millimeters | Inches | Common Jewelry Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10 ga | 2.59 mm | 0.102 in | Heavy bangles, structural work |
| 12 ga | 2.05 mm | 0.081 in | Heavy rings, cuffs, forged elements |
| 14 ga | 1.63 mm | 0.064 in | Heavy ring shanks, bangles |
| 16 ga | 1.29 mm | 0.051 in | Ring shanks, jump rings, heavier findings |
| 18 ga | 1.02 mm | 0.040 in | Ring bands, pendants, strong findings |
| 20 ga | 0.812 mm | 0.032 in | Ear wires, bezels, light findings |
| 22 ga | 0.644 mm | 0.025 in | Light wirework, wrapping, small components |
| 24 ga | 0.511 mm | 0.020 in | Bezel wire, fine wrapping, thin sheet |
| 26 ga | 0.405 mm | 0.016 in | Fine bezels, delicate wirework |
| 28 ga | 0.321 mm | 0.013 in | Very fine wirework, lightweight details |
| 30 ga | 0.255 mm | 0.010 in | Fine decorative work, delicate wrapping |
| 32 ga | 0.202 mm | 0.008 in | Very fine decorative or specialty work |
Common Jewelry Gauges
Jewelry gauge choice depends on the part being made, the metal, the design and how much strength the finished piece needs.
- 24 gauge: often used for fine bezel wire and lightweight sheet work.
- 22 gauge: useful for light wirework, wrapping and small decorative parts.
- 20 gauge: common for ear wires, light findings and some bezel work.
- 18 gauge: useful for stronger findings, ring elements and small structural parts.
- 16 gauge: often used for heavier jump rings, ring shanks and stronger wire components.
- 14 gauge and thicker: used for heavy rings, bangles, cuffs and forged pieces.
Wire Gauge vs Sheet Gauge
Wire gauge usually refers to the diameter of round wire. Sheet gauge refers to the thickness of flat sheet metal. The same gauge number can be used in both contexts, but the practical use at the bench can be very different.
For example, 20 gauge round wire might be useful for ear wires or small findings, while 20 gauge sheet may be used for light pendants, backplates or pierced designs.
Why Millimeters Are Better For Jewelry Calculations
Gauge is convenient when ordering metal, but millimeters are more useful when calculating ring blanks, bezel height, stone settings, template scale and fabrication layouts.
If you are using the Jewelry Calculator, convert gauge to millimeters first and enter the actual measured thickness whenever possible.