Thursday, 27 January 2011

Busy, Busy...

I'm trying desperately to properly stock my Artfire store without compromising my style in jewelry. I got a few things finished and pictures taken (miracle!) but now the descriptions and tags have to be done. Darned store is hard work!
From jewelry
Champagne top drilled pearls with peacock pearls and golden pyrite from Beads Of Cambay. The pendant at the bottom is on a sterling lobster clasp and can be removed to give the necklace a completely different look.
From jewelry
From jewelry

The next necklace is turquoise and copper, Let Your Spirit Soar.
From jewelry
The clasp is a handmade copper bird.
From jewelry
From jewelry

The last necklace is rhodonite with a silver handmade toggle clasp.
From jewelry
From jewelry
From jewelry

Saturday, 15 January 2011

Chain Maille

Making chain maille is like knitting - repetitive, kind of mindless, something you can do without too much thinking - but then you look at what you've done and think, "Wow!" The patterns and variations are endless and a lot of them can be found on Maille International.
I love doing chain maille but I'm a rank beginner compared to some of the fantastic artisans out there. But because I'm a beginner, I'm picking up a few tips that make it much easier and wanted to share them with you. This is not a tutorial: my camera isn't good enough, I'm not good enough and you can find terrific tutes on The Beading Gem's site and Davidchain Jewelry, as well as some great books on the subject. This is for people who have read the tutorials and made a start.
From box chain
The chain I'm working on is a box chain, or Inca Puno chain. It's similar to the way a Byzantine chain is made, but with sets of four rings rather than six.
From box chain
Most tutorials I've seen tell you to use two sets of pliers to work the rings. I find that if you use one set in your dominant hand and can use your thumb and index finger of the non-dominant hand, you get a much better join with your rings, because you have a better feel when it snaps together and then you quickly run your finger or thumb over the join. If it's out at all or has a burr, you can do a quick pinch with the pliers, or sand a little as you go. Of course, this takes a little finger strength and the old arthritis does some complaining occasionally.
Toothpicks are another great tool for chain maille.
From box chain
I hang the chain, and push the toothpick to hold the first set of two rings.
From box chain
Then I hold the rings below the ones with the toothpick, pull out the pick, let those two rings fall outside the ones I'm holding, and put the pick in the set I'm holding.
From box chain
From box chain
Put your fingers on the first set that fell outside and hold them up, so that when you take the toothpick out of the second set, you can pry that set open slightly and see the tops of the set you're holding. Slide the toothpick through them.
From box chain
I've already got one open ring with two closed rings hanging from it, and the open ring will slide right by the toothpick. I'm holding the toothpick with one hand and inserting the ring with the pliers in my other hand.
From box chain
Once that ring is closed and smooth, I'll hang the chain so that the two rings I just put on hang down, and put, yes, a toothpick through them. You can see by the above picture that by doing this, the open ring you just put on is pretty lonesome looking and it's easy to put the second open ring on without going through part of the chain you shouldn't.
Putting the toothpick in each step seems like a lot of extra work and effort, but it really isn't. Just like a knitting needle, it's in and out very quickly once you get into the rhythm of the pattern, but it can save you a lot of time or grief in the end. You've figured out the pattern, your rings are all opened or closed, whichever you require in sets of four, you're just smoking, putting them together so fast and then you stop to admire the five or six inches already finished....and you see a spot where you've missed a ring, or passed it through the wrong ring...believe me, got THAT T-shirt! You can use a pick of any kind, but toothpicks are small enough not to get in the way and big enough to be able to grip. They separate each step of the pattern and that is so important when you've worked long enough at the fiddly little rings to be half blind. Using a pick makes the pattern look organized and your next step orderly, but try doing this chain or Persian or Byzantine without a tail (my paperclip) or a pick of some kind and you'll see just how disorganized all those little rings can get. But do it right and you'll have something wonderful that is all alliteration - smooth, slinky, supple, sinuous...have fun!

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

Happy New Year!

A few days late but one of the nicest New Year videos I've seen.

Tuesday, 4 January 2011

"If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went."

(Will Rogers)

Monday, 3 January 2011

Who's Going To Boss Us Now?


Dear old Twice, boss of the house, guardian of her universe, gave up the good fight today. It'll seem so strange, walking one dog and being able to socialize with other dogs (Twice would not let other dogs near me), being able to lie on the couch without a dog sitting on my chest, sleeping without a dog under the covers (she was always cold) and not having an empty food dish pushed all around the kitchen until it was filled. She loved balls that she could push, and would yowl at the orange treat ball that needed to be filled every night. When it was filled with kibble, she'd push it all around the lower floor and Dewey would trail along behind her, helping her clean up the kibble as it dropped out. If Dewey had the nerve to be sitting beside me, she'd jump up between us and give him "the look" and he'd leave immediately. She was afraid of nothing or no one, a rottweiler in a little dog coat, even putting the run on a monstrous Irish wolfhound who had the nerve to be in her store parking lot one day. Dewey was probably hiding behind me.
Dewey and I are sure going to miss her.