Showing posts with label Handmade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Handmade. Show all posts

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Jewelry Making Forum June Prize

Each month at the Jewelry Making Forum on About.com one member hosts a drawing for a prize to be given to another member.  NH Bead Lady was the host in June and I was one of the two winners. Thank you Linda for the fantastic sets of beads and the aventurine stone.  I looked for some time at the stone and tried to decide how to use it.  I thought about wire wrapping it.  I thought about making a bezel setting for it.  My fine silver bezel wire isn't wide enough to make the bezel, I could not see me cutting silver sheet wide enough to make a bezel, and then it would cover most of the stone.  The stone shape made me think of an asymmetric bead to use as a focal in a necklace.  The red rectangular beads (RUBY) would compliment this stone with the juxtaposition of green and red, so I continued this and made the clasp end complete the necklace with some of the green Tourmaline beads.  So the necklace was strung of silver colored wire with Sterling Silver findings and lobster claw clasp.
Nedklace,Aventurine,Ruby,Tourmaline,Handmade,Unique
Just click on the thumbnail to see large version of the picture. 

I could not let this necklace be alone in life, so I used some more of the Tourmaline chips to make two 2 inch drop earrings on surgical steel ear wires.  Thus when you leave the aventurine focal and travel up the necklace you then jump to the ears where the dark green is continued.  So here are the earrings:
Earrings,Tourmaline,Handmade,Unique

Thanks for looking. Looking forward to seeing what other winners do in the future.

John


Thursday, March 10, 2011

HOT Spring Pink Earrings

Monday, November 8, 2010

Color Tour

Featuring the Artisans of Artisan Jeweler Guild

Friday, October 8, 2010

What is Steampunk?

by divapixie - Cindy Thompson

I went out on a search last evening to find a true definition of what "steampunk" really is. I am choosing to quote the article "Steampunk 101" from http://www.tor.com/ as my definition reference. They refer to steampunk as meaning "Victorian science fiction".,continuing on to state "Here “Victorian” is not meant to indicate a specific culture, but rather references a time period and an aesthetic: the industrialized 19th century."
In other words, Victorian clothing, fashion and ideals combined with what then would have been considered futuristic. Think of combining motorized, steam driven objects with corset, bustles and waistcoats.
"The term “steampunk” was not coined until the late 1980s, when author K. W. Jeter used it humorously to describe a grouping of stories set in the Victorian period written during a time when near-future cyberpunk was the prevailing form of science fiction."
The article goes into more detail about the associations made with the word "steampunk" and also references items that are often associated with this fashion movement as well as dissecting why they have become so iconic to the movement. I highly recommend this article for more in depth detail about all things considered "steampunk". http://www.tor.com/blogs/2009/10/steampunk-101





Now, as for my personal experiences with this movement, I actually have very few. I was first asked to create some "steampunk" pieces about 4 years back. A good friend of mine was going to a Convention event in central Minnesota.
My jewelry sales, then hosted on Etsy, were next to non-existent at the time and I thought perhaps I could send her some jewelry pieces to wear at Con to spark interest in my jewelry shop online. She said the types of pieces people at Con would most be interested in would be "steampunk" inspired pieces. I had no idea what on earth that meant.
After a short stint of research online, I made a run to the hardware store to pick up some nuts and bolts. I also had some parts from an old microwave I had recently taken apart. I lashed these together into a pendant and brooch (the pendant is still with me today and is listed in my Artfire Studio). My friend said the pieces were nice but not quite steampunk.





I continues on in my quest to make steampunk items and have tried MANY different things. Here's what i have discovered from my experiences.
~Some people prefer gears and cogs on their jewelry that have motion.
~Some people think gears and cogs on anything is great.
~Some people scoff at the idea of putting gears and cogs EVERYWHERE.
So as you can see... it's a subjective thing. Just like any of type of fashion, steampunk fashion is left entirely up to the person wearing it. I now subscribe to the steampunk fashion community on livejournal. I often read posts where the controversy over what is or is not steampunk can get rather heated. Everyone seems to have their own opinions and views on the matter. It is essentially, like so many other things, left to interpretation.
So you see, truly finding things that are "steampunk" is actually quite difficult. I prefer to think of some of my jewelry pieces as 'steampunk inspired' rather than truly steampunk. I'll let the discerning participant decide for themselves.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Meet Tracy From Harmony In Metal




1.Tell us your name and the name of your studio(s) and how or why you chose it. Please provide link(s).

My name is Tracy and my studio is called Harmony In Metal. I struggled with my business name forever. I'd been playing around with variations of my last name and one day while I was driving home from work Harmony In Metal popped into my head and it just seemed like a perfect fit so I ran with it.

Harmony In Metal ArtFire Studio





2.How long have you been creating jewelry and how did you start?

Technically I guess I started in junior high making friendship bracelets out of embroidery floss but I didn't start up again until about 8 or 9 years ago. It was actually a display of beads at Michaels that made me decide to try my hand at real jewelry making. I quickly bored of stringing and started incorporating more and more chain into my work. I picked up the copper wire on a whim one day about 6 years ago and never looked back. At that time there weren't a lot of pre-manufactured things available in pure copper so it pushed me to learn how to make those things myself.


3.Did your jewelry making evolve from another craft?

Yes and no. The friendship bracelets I made as a kid weren't that far of a cry from crochetting but what made me start making jewelry as an adult was simply a store setup change. I was shopping for embroidery floss for a cross stitch project for my then infant son and where I would usually find it suddenly held a display of beads and findings. On a whim I bought beads and findings instead and made my first bracelet later that evening.


4.What is your favorite material to use and why? Do you use other materials?

Hands down it's copper. Like many people I thought I would use it to practice before I moved on to silver, I just never actually moved on. It was a combination of being given the copper roof off an old shed and the first time I ever held a flame to it that hooked me. Both showed me the array of colors the metal could produce but it was that old roof that fascinated me the most. I have spent the past several years figuring out how to duplicate all those wonderful patinas and keep them stable.


I do plan on incorporating some other metals into my pieces as well and maybe even do some pieces completely in silver at some point but the bulk of my work will always include copper.


5. What is your favorite item in your store or what is your favorite type of item to create?


That is such a tough question because there are a few items that are my favorite for one reason or another. My current favorite is my Chysoprase Windows bracelet that I just listed.


It is one of the boldest bracelets I've ever made but it feels like fabric draped across your wrist. I came so close to keeping it for myself I loved the way it felt so much.


I don't really have a favorite type of item to create, it really just depends on my mood at the moment.



6.What or who ( ie: other artists, nature etc. ) inspire you the most?

Not too long after I started making jewelry a friend and I went into a boutique in town and that was where I got my first glimpse of Thomas Mann's work. I was immediately drawn to how different it was from what I was used to and that really drove me to try to make my work stand apart from the crowd. I find inspiration in all kinds of different things. From nature to something someone says or even the lyrics in a song.



7.Tell us something interesting or unique about you or your shop.

I come from a family full of artistic and musically gifted people. For a good majority of my life I couldn't figure out how I could be the only one without a creative bone in my body. I can't play a single instrument and most kindergartners can draw better than I can. It wasn't until I first held a saw in my hand that I finally realized I was creative, I'd just never found the right outlet before.





8.What advice or tip would you give to other artists?

Since I'm a chainmaille artist first and foremost, ring closures are very important. This applies to any jump ring ever used in jewelry, a smooth tight closure not only gives your work a more professional appearance it also makes the connection itself stronger.


Never be afraid to try a new technique and then practice, practice, practice. No matter what you're doing you will get better the more you do it and there will come a time that you laugh about how hard you used to think it was.


9.Where can you be found around the web? Please provide links to your pages/social sites.


Facebook

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Blog

Twitter