After taking a break, the Jewelry Artisans Community blog carnival is back to finish up the year. Our topic for the month of December is "When You Can't Make Jewelry"
It just so happens that I've been living this situation the last few months so I feel qualified to write about it. The first seven months of 2017 were going along great; I was in a creative groove learning new things, just full of ideas and making new jewelry designs on a daily basis . I couldn't wait to enter my studio each day.
Heck, I was so creative and my mind so busy that I even made refrigerator magnets out of real fall leaves!
Then along came August. While learning how to operate a dirt bike, I crashed and badly sprained my knee. It later turned out that the tip of my tibia was actually fractured. This affected jewelry making because the studio is downstairs and I wasn't able to navigate the stairs. After stewing about this turn of events for a week, I managed to hobble down the stairs one day, grab my tools and some wire and hobble back up the stairs where I parked myself in the recliner with ice on my knee and fiddled with wire. It wasn't really making jewelry, but it satisfied the need to create.
As my knee healed, I was able to go downstairs again, but by then it was time to leave on a long planned vacation to Sweden and Poland. Seeing so much history, meeting wonderfully friendly people, eating incredible food and having experiences we'll never forget made the trip a dream come true. There were moments I longed to be in the studio, but I didn't really have time to think about it because we were having so much fun while on vacation.
Once home, I couldn't wait get back to work making jewelry, but it wasn't to be. Shortly after returning home, my sister came to visit for two weeks. Between catching up and showing her the sights, there was no time for the studio. I put it out of my mind and enjoyed the time with my sister.
And, now we're about to leave for Thailand and Vietnam; it will be April when we return. This will be our third trip to SE Asia and I am really looking forward to going and seeing the friends we have made there as well as enjoying warm weather while it's snowing at home. And, let's not forget eating authentic Thai and Vietnamese food every day! There has been very little studio time because we're doing all the things that have to be done to prepare for a trip of this length including winterizing our home. This will be the longest I've even been away from my studio.
Whine, whine, whine, whine...!
At this point, my frustration about no time to make jewelry and my desire to be in my studio have given way to acceptance. It's not the time for jewelry and I am not going to fight it. Just as the bloggers from JAC needed a break from the monthly blog carnival, I am going to look at this as a break that will refuel my creative soul and re-charge my artistic battery. Sometimes we get so intensely involved in being creative that we forget to savor the process and the journey and focus instead the end result. There is also that trap artists get caught in of feeling they have to be productive and constantly coming up with new things. Taking time to step back can be just what is needed to look at it through fresh eyes.
I am going to go to Thailand and take a side trip to Vietnam and thoroughly enjoy our time there. Thai and Vietnamese food awaits! Warm weather! Exotic (to me) sights are waiting to be experienced. My camera will get a workout and I will be inspired by all that I see, hear, smell and taste. When we come back, the studio will be waiting to welcome me home. But, I still plan to take some wire and tools with me - just in case the creative bug strikes...
To see what the other members of the JAC blog carnival have to say on this topic, please click on the links below:
Cat's Wire
Musings about the art of jewelry design. I reserve the right to explore other topics if the mood strikes!
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Thursday, June 1, 2017
May 2017 Blog Carnival - Tutorials
Where the heck did May go? Can't believe it's time again for the Jewelry Artisans Community monthly blog carnival! This month we are talking about tutorials.
I'm one of those people who likes to figure out things on my own. Which means that I have come up with some cool designs, made some bonehead mistakes, learned from my successes and failures and used up miles of copper wire doing what I call "fiddling".
But, there are times when a tutorial is in order and I'm grateful to the people who have shared their skills in books, on blogs and on YouTube. They have saved me hours of time, material and frustration while also teaching me new skills. To those generous folks out there, I say a heartfelt Thank You!
Here are a few of my favorites:
If you're into leaves and want to make wire wrapped leaf jewelry, this tutorial is easy to follow and will result in realistic looking leaves. It's also really fun to see the leaves form!
Wire Birch Leaves
If you're like me and know nothing about macrame, but want to use cord in your designs, this is another super helpful and well written tutorial. It's very easy to follow and the results are beautiful. I used it to make a charm bracelet retirement gift for one of my best friends:
Pom Pom Bracelet
I had long wanted to learn how to make netted wire pendants and this tutorial from beadaholique that shows how to net around a bottle did the trick. Wire netting is another fun technique and once you "get it" will find yourself applying it to all kinds of designs.
Wire Netted Bottle
I'll leave you with a little tutorial I wrote recently about how to make headpins on your kitchen stove (if you have gas or propane - electric doesn't get hot enough. At least, I don't think it does as I didn't try it!
Making Balled Headpins
To see what the other Jewelry Artisan Community blog carnival participants have to say about tutorials, please click on the links below:
Violetmoon's Corner
Cat's Wire
I'm one of those people who likes to figure out things on my own. Which means that I have come up with some cool designs, made some bonehead mistakes, learned from my successes and failures and used up miles of copper wire doing what I call "fiddling".
But, there are times when a tutorial is in order and I'm grateful to the people who have shared their skills in books, on blogs and on YouTube. They have saved me hours of time, material and frustration while also teaching me new skills. To those generous folks out there, I say a heartfelt Thank You!
Here are a few of my favorites:
If you're into leaves and want to make wire wrapped leaf jewelry, this tutorial is easy to follow and will result in realistic looking leaves. It's also really fun to see the leaves form!
Wire Birch Leaves
If you're like me and know nothing about macrame, but want to use cord in your designs, this is another super helpful and well written tutorial. It's very easy to follow and the results are beautiful. I used it to make a charm bracelet retirement gift for one of my best friends:
Pom Pom Bracelet
I had long wanted to learn how to make netted wire pendants and this tutorial from beadaholique that shows how to net around a bottle did the trick. Wire netting is another fun technique and once you "get it" will find yourself applying it to all kinds of designs.
Wire Netted Bottle
I'll leave you with a little tutorial I wrote recently about how to make headpins on your kitchen stove (if you have gas or propane - electric doesn't get hot enough. At least, I don't think it does as I didn't try it!
Making Balled Headpins
To see what the other Jewelry Artisan Community blog carnival participants have to say about tutorials, please click on the links below:
Violetmoon's Corner
Cat's Wire
Wednesday, April 26, 2017
April 2017 Blog Carnival - My Other Arts
It's blog carnival time at the Jewelry Artisans Community and the topic for April is other crafts and arts we pursue besides designing and creating jewelry.
I'm downright incompetent when it comes to things like sewing, knitting, crochet, pottery and sculpture and pretty much everything else I've tried. But, I seem to have a knack for cooking. My grandmother and mother were both wonderful cooks and I remember that when I was young, I liked to sit at the kitchen table and watch. Sometimes they even let me help!
As a young, just married adult, I avidly pursued my interest in preparing beautiful meals, but as the years went on and my career became more and more demanding, cooking fell by the wayside. It became more sustenance than any kind of creative endeavor. When I retired nearly three years ago, I found my interest in food rekindled and now find myself really enjoying creating with food once again:
It was rather by accident that I discovered how much I enjoy taking photographs. About the same time I retired, I bought a Canon Powershot for photographing the jewelry that I make. It wasn't long before I started taking the camera with me pretty much every where I go in order to take photos of things I might want to paint later on. You just never know when a photo opportunity will present itself. I just love that little camera and the fact that it's red is a bonus!
I've learned and continue to learn that there is a lot more to photography than snapping a picture. A good photographer can get fantastic photos with a little point and shoot camera while an unskilled photographer will take mediocre photos with the best and most expensive camera equipment available. So much depends on the the photographer's eye for composition and lighting and what makes an interesting photograph as well as the editing that's done after the pictures have been taken. Just the act of cropping a photo can make the difference between a boring photo and a great shot.
I feel that my skills have improved over time and have actually been thinking about listing some of my photos to test the waters. I have no idea if anyone would actually be interested in purchasing any of them, but there is only one way to find out.
In no particular order, here are some of my efforts with the camera - be aware, this is very photo bloated:
I found it interesting that photographing the same subject from different angles created entirely different moods in the resulting photos:
I hope that you have enjoyed sharing my pursuits of food and photos with me. To see what other members of the Jewelry Artisans Community has to say on the subject, please click on the links below:
Violetmoon's Corner
Cat's Wire
I'm downright incompetent when it comes to things like sewing, knitting, crochet, pottery and sculpture and pretty much everything else I've tried. But, I seem to have a knack for cooking. My grandmother and mother were both wonderful cooks and I remember that when I was young, I liked to sit at the kitchen table and watch. Sometimes they even let me help!
As a young, just married adult, I avidly pursued my interest in preparing beautiful meals, but as the years went on and my career became more and more demanding, cooking fell by the wayside. It became more sustenance than any kind of creative endeavor. When I retired nearly three years ago, I found my interest in food rekindled and now find myself really enjoying creating with food once again:
Scrambled eggs with mushrooms, peppers, onions, spinach, sausage and cheese |
Chicken Salad on Lettuce Cups |
Blackberry Fruit Leather |
Frozen Fruit Pops - Clockwise from top - Peach, Blackberry/Yogurt, Blackberry, Yogurt and Strawberry, Blackberry and Cream Cheese, Watermelon, Mixed Fruit and Yogurt. |
Grilled Red Onion, Kielbasa, Yellow Peppers and Green Apple Kabobs |
Clover Rolls |
Shrimp and Veggie Stir Fry |
It was rather by accident that I discovered how much I enjoy taking photographs. About the same time I retired, I bought a Canon Powershot for photographing the jewelry that I make. It wasn't long before I started taking the camera with me pretty much every where I go in order to take photos of things I might want to paint later on. You just never know when a photo opportunity will present itself. I just love that little camera and the fact that it's red is a bonus!
I've learned and continue to learn that there is a lot more to photography than snapping a picture. A good photographer can get fantastic photos with a little point and shoot camera while an unskilled photographer will take mediocre photos with the best and most expensive camera equipment available. So much depends on the the photographer's eye for composition and lighting and what makes an interesting photograph as well as the editing that's done after the pictures have been taken. Just the act of cropping a photo can make the difference between a boring photo and a great shot.
I feel that my skills have improved over time and have actually been thinking about listing some of my photos to test the waters. I have no idea if anyone would actually be interested in purchasing any of them, but there is only one way to find out.
In no particular order, here are some of my efforts with the camera - be aware, this is very photo bloated:
I found it interesting that photographing the same subject from different angles created entirely different moods in the resulting photos:
I hope that you have enjoyed sharing my pursuits of food and photos with me. To see what other members of the Jewelry Artisans Community has to say on the subject, please click on the links below:
Violetmoon's Corner
Cat's Wire
Monday, April 17, 2017
Making Balled Headpins Using Your Gas Kitchen Stove
Have you ever wished that you could make your own ball headpins for your jewelry designs? Maybe what's holding you back is that you don't own a torch. Perhaps fear of using a torch or fear of fire is the culprit. Or, a torch isn't allowed in your building or covered under your insurance. Whatever the reason, this tutorial will to show you how to make hand made ball headpins or balled wire on the gas stove in your kitchen. Who would have thought that sitting right there is a big ol' torch just waiting to be put into service!?
While working in my studio one day, I needed some balled wire for a piece I was working on and was annoyed that I was going to have to set the project aside until I found a source of balled wire. As I entered the kitchen in search of a snack, my eyes settled on the gas stove in my kitchen and I wondered if the flame of the burners was hot enough to melt metal and form a ball on the ends.
Quickly grabbing some copper wire and an old pair of pliers I decided to give it a try. Not only did it work, it worked great! I was so excited and having so much fun watching the little ball form on the end of the wire that I ended up making 110 balled headpins!
So, let's get started!
Fill one small container with cold water and set it next to the stove.
You will need copper or sterling silver wire that is no larger than 20 gauge. I tried 18 gauge but wasn't able to get it hot enough to form a ball.
One old pair of pliers. Don't use your good pliers as the flame and heat will blacken the steel and may even cause the pliers to warp a bit.
Cut your wire to the desired length and straighten. I made three inch lengths as that's usually the length I want my headpins.
Using your pliers hold the end of the wire vertically:
Turn one of your stove burners on high heat and hold the end of the wire in the hottest part of the flame. What worked best for me was holding the wire about half an inch from where the flame comes out of the jet. If you look at the photo, you will see a fine blue line and that is what I aimed for:
If the wire is in the right place, the wire will first turn red:
Then it will turn white. In this photo a ball can be seen starting to form at the end of the wire:
Next you will see a green flame and this is what you want - it means you have found the sweet spot on your stove burner! The metal is melting and making a ball. From start to finish, this process should take no longer than 30 - 45 seconds.
When the ball has fully formed, remove the wire from the flame. It will be red hot and this is where the bowl of water comes in. Quench the wire in the water for a few seconds to cool it.
CAUTION: Your pliers will be hot. Do not touch the ends or leave them somewhere that small children or pets could come into contact with them. If you set them down put them on something fireproof such as metal or stone until they have cooled off. One of my cast iron skillets came in handy for this purpose.
Congratulations! You can now set your headpin aside and start on the next one.
Once you have made all of your headpins, you will want to harden them as the heat anneals or softens the wire. You can do this by work hardening, tapping gently with a rubber mallet or putting them into a tumbler. The tumbler will also clean of some of the dark scale that formed on the wire when it was heated.
If you have a tumbler, put just enough water in the tumbler to cover the stainless steel shot and the headpins and add a drop of Dawn dish soap:
Let tumble for at least 2 - 3 hours. When you remove them from the tumbler many of them will have been bent by the tumbling action. Simply straighten them out using your fingers or nylon jaw pliers. Once straightened, you will see that much of the black scale has been removed as well:
In order to remove the rest of the black scale, you will need to make a pickle. Carina, one of my jewelry making friends at the Jewelry Artisans Community found an easy pickle recipe at The Artisan Life blog which does a great job of explaining pickling metal and it is what I used for this project. You can read our discussion and experiments for making headpins on the stove at this thread: Making Balled Headpins
Here they are. 110 beautiful, shiny copper balled headpins!
These can now be used in jewelry designs and if you like oxidized copper they are ready to be dipped in liver of sulfur.
Some safety things to consider. The copper made very little if any fumes that I noticed but I was curious so looked it up. Copper is not considered to be a highly toxic metal, but it can cause respiratory problems and/or rashes if one is exposed to a lot of it. If you are concerned about fumes or have delicate pets such as birds, make sure your work area is ventilated either by opening a window, using fans or using the exhaust fan on your stove. Wearing eye protection is also recommended.
Don't forget to turn off the stove when you're finished!
Something to keep in mind is that how successful you will be is going to depend partly on your stove. My stove is propane while others are natural gas. Propane burns just a little bit hotter than natural gas which is something to take into consideration. Different stoves will be calibrated differently which can also make a difference in how hot the flame burns. My best advice would be to try it and experiment until you find what works for you.
Have fun, best of luck and please come back here to post comments about how it worked for you!
While working in my studio one day, I needed some balled wire for a piece I was working on and was annoyed that I was going to have to set the project aside until I found a source of balled wire. As I entered the kitchen in search of a snack, my eyes settled on the gas stove in my kitchen and I wondered if the flame of the burners was hot enough to melt metal and form a ball on the ends.
Quickly grabbing some copper wire and an old pair of pliers I decided to give it a try. Not only did it work, it worked great! I was so excited and having so much fun watching the little ball form on the end of the wire that I ended up making 110 balled headpins!
So, let's get started!
Fill one small container with cold water and set it next to the stove.
You will need copper or sterling silver wire that is no larger than 20 gauge. I tried 18 gauge but wasn't able to get it hot enough to form a ball.
One old pair of pliers. Don't use your good pliers as the flame and heat will blacken the steel and may even cause the pliers to warp a bit.
Cut your wire to the desired length and straighten. I made three inch lengths as that's usually the length I want my headpins.
Using your pliers hold the end of the wire vertically:
Turn one of your stove burners on high heat and hold the end of the wire in the hottest part of the flame. What worked best for me was holding the wire about half an inch from where the flame comes out of the jet. If you look at the photo, you will see a fine blue line and that is what I aimed for:
If the wire is in the right place, the wire will first turn red:
Then it will turn white. In this photo a ball can be seen starting to form at the end of the wire:
Next you will see a green flame and this is what you want - it means you have found the sweet spot on your stove burner! The metal is melting and making a ball. From start to finish, this process should take no longer than 30 - 45 seconds.
When the ball has fully formed, remove the wire from the flame. It will be red hot and this is where the bowl of water comes in. Quench the wire in the water for a few seconds to cool it.
CAUTION: Your pliers will be hot. Do not touch the ends or leave them somewhere that small children or pets could come into contact with them. If you set them down put them on something fireproof such as metal or stone until they have cooled off. One of my cast iron skillets came in handy for this purpose.
Congratulations! You can now set your headpin aside and start on the next one.
Once you have made all of your headpins, you will want to harden them as the heat anneals or softens the wire. You can do this by work hardening, tapping gently with a rubber mallet or putting them into a tumbler. The tumbler will also clean of some of the dark scale that formed on the wire when it was heated.
If you have a tumbler, put just enough water in the tumbler to cover the stainless steel shot and the headpins and add a drop of Dawn dish soap:
Let tumble for at least 2 - 3 hours. When you remove them from the tumbler many of them will have been bent by the tumbling action. Simply straighten them out using your fingers or nylon jaw pliers. Once straightened, you will see that much of the black scale has been removed as well:
In order to remove the rest of the black scale, you will need to make a pickle. Carina, one of my jewelry making friends at the Jewelry Artisans Community found an easy pickle recipe at The Artisan Life blog which does a great job of explaining pickling metal and it is what I used for this project. You can read our discussion and experiments for making headpins on the stove at this thread: Making Balled Headpins
Here they are. 110 beautiful, shiny copper balled headpins!
These can now be used in jewelry designs and if you like oxidized copper they are ready to be dipped in liver of sulfur.
Some safety things to consider. The copper made very little if any fumes that I noticed but I was curious so looked it up. Copper is not considered to be a highly toxic metal, but it can cause respiratory problems and/or rashes if one is exposed to a lot of it. If you are concerned about fumes or have delicate pets such as birds, make sure your work area is ventilated either by opening a window, using fans or using the exhaust fan on your stove. Wearing eye protection is also recommended.
Don't forget to turn off the stove when you're finished!
Something to keep in mind is that how successful you will be is going to depend partly on your stove. My stove is propane while others are natural gas. Propane burns just a little bit hotter than natural gas which is something to take into consideration. Different stoves will be calibrated differently which can also make a difference in how hot the flame burns. My best advice would be to try it and experiment until you find what works for you.
Have fun, best of luck and please come back here to post comments about how it worked for you!
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