Metal 'stamping and forming' in miniature?
While designing and building a 'bundle' of quite small prototypes, it was necessary to make about 300 stainless steel electrodes 7x7mm square by 1mm thick. First thoughts were to just chop up some 1mm stainless sheet and machine them as blanks.
Attaching stainless (suture) wire for electrical (and other) purposes presented a few difficulties, as did securing the electrodes in place. Then I discovered a process that would allow me to profile them from much thinner material, SS 0.07mm shim to be exact.
As you can see here …

the electrodes could feature tabs as a means of attachment together with a (rather crude) means of attaching the wire.
The block in the picture, now more of a desktop novelty is 25x20mm. The stack height of about 300 shims measures 35mm. Gauge steel pieces 1.5mm thick riveted through the length provided support hold the sandwich together.
Held tightly in this sandwich arrangement produced clean blanks with no need for deburring.
Although the wire EDM process was developed in the 60’s, it was about 1990 at a company somewhere south east of Melbourne when these particular electrodes were ‘burned’. Clearly from the literature and links, significant advances have taken place since then.
The process might prove useful to Model Engineers!?
Sam