To make things a little easier, the currently known techniques using Ginto are;
Heizen (German for "Heating", Kanji mean "Sacred Bite") which makes some kind of rectangular beam/projectile (not sure which it is to be honest, could be either) from silver tubes to slice through the opponent.
- Spoiler:
Incantation: "Feel the wrath of battle and accept this sacred chalice - Heizen!"
Gritz (as far as I know it's actually not an existing German word, Kanji mean "Five Rack Ties" or "Quintuple Restraining Frames") which forms a man-sized pentagonal Quincy cross, apparently turning into something along the lines of an iron maiden, to hold the target.
- Spoiler:
Incantation: "A silver rod strikes the five-fingered stone bed - Gritz!"
Wolke (German for "Cloud", Kanji mean "Green Cup" or "Emerald Grail") which creates a large blast. Ishida used it to cushion the impact of a fall.
- Spoiler:
Incantation: "Tilt the goblet to the west - Wolke!"
Sprenger (German for "Explosion", Kanji mean "Ripping Grass Formation"), the technique Ishida used against the 8th Espada. I'll just go ahead and copy the description of this one from the Bleach Wiki...
This technique uses five Seele Schneiders to create a pentagon-shaped seal, which when activated causes a massive explosion within its borders. When an object or a person stands within the middle of the Pentagon can the placement of the fifth Seele Schneider trap them by wrapping and binding their legs to the ground with dense spirit particles. The Seele Schneiders function as accumulators, gathering the necessary amount of spirit particles to create the explosion. The liquid inside a silver tube acts as the trigger. The preparations for the technique combined with the charging time for the Seele Schneiders make its use in battle impractical unless the user has a partner that can stall to buy time.
(Don't have a good image for this I'm afraid).
While it's not necesarily a Ginto technique, he did use a Ginto as the trigger to the explosion. No incantation (preperations are already long enough anyway).