Friday, March 17, 2017

flower wafers

I recently found these neat little things to use in enameling called "flower wafers". They are tiny glass millifiori discs that when melted into the enamel surface will spread and flatten out. I just loved all the colors they came in and wanted to design some pendants to use them. Here is how they look before melting:


And after:

From there I thought what a great idea it would be to do a series of the four seasons with different colored flowers at the base of a tree; pink, white and purple for spring, multi-colors for summer and yellow, orange and red for fall.




And finally to round off  the seasons I needed a "winter" with a dusting of opaque white snow flakes:


These can be found in my etsy shop along with some other flower wafer themed pieces.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

from white to black to color



Just now finished this new batch of pendants - will probably list one in my etsy shop later today.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

it's like an avalanche - but in a good way

It's like an avalanche - but in a good way. From all the stuff up top the designs filter down. 

For many months, during the summer, I didn't have that much interest in jewelry making - I wanted to be outside biking and hiking with the grandkids. I worked on jewelry on rainy days or free days but it feels like a switch has flipped. I feel renewed in the studio. The ideas and designs are piling up at the edge of my table. I'm glad it's raining today. 

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

7 eyes today

It seems that I get on a kick and then can't let go of it till I explore it to the end. Enameled eyes are my present theme. Eyes in hearts, eyes in suns and eyes in hands and soon there will be eyes in trees and eyes in I don't know what else yet...


I also finished a bird today that I have had on my enameling table for quite a while. Here are some other pieces that I used some of my previously made enameled eyes in - a few are still available in my etsy shop:






It will be fun to think what I can do with these next 7...





Sunday, October 27, 2013

variations on a theme

Back in March of 2010 I made hundreds of little faces and here it is, over 3 years later, and I find they are still one of my favorite elements to use for jewelry.  I got the idea to make this post when a friend saw the "Honey Heart" pendant (bottom row, second from left) and wanted a similar one but with filigree wire instead of glass leaves for the wings. I finished it today (3rd from the left) and thought I would show the 2 together - Variations on a Theme. Then I thought I might just check and see how many others I have made over the years that I still have in stock. I'm definitely not ready to move away from this theme yet. A face brings these little guys to life - gives them a soul!

Some of these might still be for sale in my etsy shop: https://www.etsy.com/shop/marybird

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

fresh look

a polymer clay picture bead bracelet like this one all packed up and ready to go

All set now with my new packaging. I got these little black organza bags and a square of anti-tarnish material to put in each bag with the jewelry. Plus I am adding a second clear plastic bag to hold a polishing pad (with a slip of paper with my info on it so that if they want to find me later they can) that I have always included - but before the jewelry went in the plastic bag with the polishing pad - now they are separate. I also needed new mailing boxes and this time I got ones wrapped in brown paper instead of the more generic white boxes I used to use. I hope it will be as much fun for the customer to open as it has been for me to package it.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

designing and fabricating "elan"

Last week I was contacted by Deb N. a customer on etsy to see if I could make her a pendant with a clear angel face, similar to one I had already listed on etsy that had a red angel face. I said sure! After we decided on a design she asked if I could take some photos during the creation of her pendant. I thought that was a great idea - a wonderful way to chronicle what happens in the fabrication of a piece. So here is the "story".

She had pointed me in the direction of a piece I did that she liked and then after a few more conversations back and forth she sent me this drawing - also saying that she liked peacock feathers. I love to get something like this - it really gives me a direction to go in:


This is the design I sketched from her drawing and another piece beside it that Deb said she liked.

 Here are all the stones that will eventually be in the piece sitting in their bezels. At the top is a simulated white opal, a clear frosted glass face with mirror backing, two 5 mm round pink CZs and at the bottom an 8 x 10 mm simulated pink tourmaline.

 Shown above with a roll of fine silver bezel wire.  I cut the wire to the correct length and then solder the edges together for the bezels. Usually I have to do adjustments to the heights of the bezels - especially for faceted stone bezels.

 Above, a bezel is shown just before soldering. It's being held steady in a pair of tweezers and there is a small square of solder in place on top.

 Some of my favorite and most used hand tools. From left to right: 2 bezel mandrels (for making the bezels a perfect round or oval shape after they are soldered together), chain nose pliers, metal shears for cutting bezel wire, the round white base of a magnifying glass on a movable arm, assorted sizes and shapes of files, a small plastic headed mallet and a larger one with a plastic and a rubber face - at the very top are rolls of bezel wire.

Drawing the design onto tracing paper.

 
Ready now to cut the pieces apart and glue onto the sterling sheet.

 Here the tracings are glued onto the sterling sheet. The body of the pendant will be made from 22 gauge and the feathers will be 20 gauge.

Sawing one of the feathers with a jewelry saw. Below the sawing area is a bucket to catch small pieces of sterling that fall - I don't want to waste any.

Close-up of how fine the saw blade is.

 The sterling parts are now all cut out (they still have the tracing paper on them) and I put them in place with the stones and their bezels just to see how everything looks together.

 I use metal stamps to put detail on the feathers after filing the edges. I bevel the edges so it will be smooth to the touch in the final piece.

 Stamping the name, "Elan" and my wood thrush studio maker's mark and a sterling mark on the back.

This shows the letter stamps and the hammer I use. After this stage I also file all the edges smooth on the base piece and sand everything.

 This shows the back of the feathers with solder squares in place for "sweat soldering". First the solder is melted onto the backs of the small pieces, then they will be put in place on the back plate and heated again till the solder flows and joins the top and bottom pieces.

 The solder after being melted into place.

 The feathers are put in the pickle - pickle is the name for the acid that is used to remove oxidation from metal after soldering. The oxidation has to be removed before they can soldered again. Solder will not run on dirty metal.

 My soldering set-up. From left to right: the soldering blocks and fire bricks that I use to support things that I am soldering - they are on a lazy-susan type base which makes it easier for me to get the torch's heat into the right places, behind them you can see the yellow mapp gas canisters that are attached to the torches I use, the "pickle pot" -which is actually just a small crock pot, a bowl of water to rinse the pickle off, and in front of that a torch sparker and assorted tweezers.

My two torches - a pencil torch which has the torch tip on a hose so it is easier to get into small places (I use it for tiny jobs like jump rings and making chain links) and on the right is the bigger torch that I use for everything else.

 I'm ready now to solder the feathers and bezels down. See the little pieces of solder beside the bezels. When the solder gets hot enough to melt it will flow into place and seal the gaps between the base plate and the bezels. Hot solder likes to flow into crevasses. I have put clear flux on the piece to retard oxidation while it is being heated but you can't see it in the photos.

After soldering.

 In the pickle.

 Nice and clean - ready to bend the bail back and solder it in place on the back. After that it is pickled again and then re-oxidized with "silver black". This is a step that I forgot to get a photo of. You will have to take my word for it that everything that looks so nice and white became nice and black after I brushed the oxidizing liquid on it. Next I sanded the black oxidation off of the high areas and did a pre-polish.

 The pendant is shown now with the stones ready to be set in it. I cut pieces of gasket material to fit in the bottom of the cabochon bezels so the cabochons can be brought up to the right height. Inside the faceted stone bezels (the 2 round bezels at the tips of the feathers and the large oval at the bottom) there are shorter bezels that hold the faceted stones inside up to the right height.

 I am pushing the bezel over a stone edge to hold it in place.

 This shows the "bezel pusher" tool. Just one last stone to set - the oval at the bottom.

Final polish done and finished! I think it turned out quite nicely. I like the delicate pink colors Deb choose to go with the angel face for this.



Sunday, August 12, 2012

shiva transformed

Hard to believe that it has been over a year since I posted anything on here! It's not that I haven't been doing anything jewelry-wise - I just haven't had the urge to write about it here. So to get back in the habit of posting...


I finished this piece last week and was very happy with it. I call it "Transforming". Here's the inspiration for it and the beginning steps in making it - cutting out all the different parts before texturing and soldering:


Shiva is the Hindu god of endings and transformation. Shiva in the pose of the statue in the photo is called "Lord of the Dance". I chose a red jasper (opaque) stone for the bottom stone and a Orissa garnet (transparent) stone for the top to imply positive re-genesis.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

another roller textured piece


Oh, I forgot  - yes, I have gotten another piece finished lately - read more about it here at my etsy shop