bronze
either gold,silver, or bronze
Gold and iron are types of metals, while bronze is a metal alloy.
Electrum
Yes. The yellow gold necklace it is mixture with red copper alloy and yellow bronze alloy, from 22k thru 10k.
220 is not a gold hallmark. The lowest number that is used as a gold hallmark is 333 (meaning 33.3% gold content, which is 8 carat, the lowest gold carat). 220 is actually the hallmark for bronze, which is a copper alloy called "Alloy 220" (or sometimes sold as "commercial bronze"), not gold.
Yes, bronze is typically worth less than gold. Bronze is an alloy made from copper and other metals, while gold is a precious metal valued for its rarity and beauty. Gold has a higher market value and is more sought after than bronze.
Bronze is generally stronger than gold. Gold is a soft metal that can be easily shaped and deformed, while bronze, an alloy of copper and tin, has superior hardness and tensile strength. This makes bronze more suitable for tools and weapons, while gold is primarily valued for its luster and resistance to corrosion. However, the specific strength can also depend on the alloy composition and treatment methods used for both metals.
the color bronze is seen as cheap color gold and silver are worth more, the better you do the better you get. they don't use other colours because colours are not worth anything they have no realness to them . gold silver and bronze are wroth money.
Depends. steels are gray or silver, depending on the alloy(mild steel, stainless). aluminums are silver/light gray. Titanium is usually a light brown/bronze. Gold is gold, bronze is bronze.
One common alloy used to make imitation gold is brass, which is a combination of copper and zinc. Another alloy used is bronze, made from copper and tin. These alloys can mimic the appearance of gold at a lower cost.
Brass and bronze are both alloys used for a wide variety of materials, especially in environments such as salt water that readily corrode most kinds of steel. Jeweler's gold is usually an alloy, unless marked "24 karat." Electrum is a silver-gold alloy that was used for coinage in ancient Greece and/or Asia Minor.
tin. Steel. Bronze. White Gold. Duralumin. Brass. Stainless Steel.