I originally thought this piece of sea glass was white, but against a white background it appears slightly grey or grey/violet. Anyway, it was such a nice, rounded shape I decided to mount it in a bezel. My usual bezel strip wasn't deep enough so I cut a wide strip of 0.5mm sterling silver, sawed into one long edge to give it a decorative "toothy" finish, and soldered it to sterling sheet. A silver squiggle, small silver balls and "fidget rings" finished off the pendant.
My soldering ability was really tested on this pendant. I started with hard, medium and easy solders in that order, but still found that seams popped open due to heat conduction. I've read that using a rouge/methylated spirit solution painted onto previous seams will protect them... that's for next time.
I originally gave this pendant a satin finish but later polished it up to a high shine. I think the satin gives a more lustrous feel, so after hallmarking it will probably revert.
Tuesday, 5 October 2010
Silver swirl and seaglass drops
Have taken a break recently due to other commitments. This hammered swirl was lying around for some time waiting to be finished, but I wasn't quite sure what it needed. Sometimes you just have to walk away or doodle a bit to find inspiration. In the end I chose 3 small seaglass pebbles, and drilled and threaded them onto 1mm diam silver wires.
I've finally sourced some relatively cheap diamond-coated hand files, plus riffler files and drill bits. I've resolved never to buy through specialist suppliers again for tools as it's almost always possible to find cheaper alternatives. One thing I won't compromise on though, is saw blades; the cheap ones just snag and/or snap constantly.
Had an idea for a seaglass "cabochon" with fidget rings - not sure where I saw it originally, possibly on Etsy. Thank you to whoever had the idea. See next post...
I've finally sourced some relatively cheap diamond-coated hand files, plus riffler files and drill bits. I've resolved never to buy through specialist suppliers again for tools as it's almost always possible to find cheaper alternatives. One thing I won't compromise on though, is saw blades; the cheap ones just snag and/or snap constantly.
Had an idea for a seaglass "cabochon" with fidget rings - not sure where I saw it originally, possibly on Etsy. Thank you to whoever had the idea. See next post...
Sunday, 1 August 2010
Ammonite
I found an amazingly detailed ammonite over 30 years ago in North Yorkshire. Using latex, I took an impression and created this pendant in .999 silver - approx 1.5 inches including bail. Polishing and burnishing has softened the detail of the silver version, but the lines on the original are incredibly crisp. I read somewhere that this little creature created about 13 chambers a year as it grew, and most lived around two years. How old does this make mine?
Sunday, 11 July 2010
Sea glass pendant
Spent a pleasant day wandering round other people's gardens in a nearby village. There were fourteen open to scrutiny, including the manor house with its fabulous specimen trees, ha-ha (boundary between the estate's gardens and grounds), and breathtaking views across the valley. After an arduous day wandering from garden to garden struggling to remember Latin plant names, we were drawn to the plant sale and cream teas in the village hall. I'm now the proud owner of an acanthus (bear's breeches), ht 2 inches, price 20p - a bargain...if it survives.
More sea glass sorting this evening. I like working with sea glass but find the unevenly shaped pieces tricky to mount in a bezel. I end up with a rather casual "arty" look where the bezel, when viewed from the front is uneven. I know it's the nature of the material I'm working with, but unless I'm specifially aiming for that casual look - and exaggerate it for emphasis - it can be frustrating. The smooth pebbles here were easier to mount. This pendant has two (grey and greeny blue) with a light green shard of glass at the base. All from Northern beaches.
More sea glass sorting this evening. I like working with sea glass but find the unevenly shaped pieces tricky to mount in a bezel. I end up with a rather casual "arty" look where the bezel, when viewed from the front is uneven. I know it's the nature of the material I'm working with, but unless I'm specifially aiming for that casual look - and exaggerate it for emphasis - it can be frustrating. The smooth pebbles here were easier to mount. This pendant has two (grey and greeny blue) with a light green shard of glass at the base. All from Northern beaches.
Saturday, 10 July 2010
Sea glass pendant - 3 colours
A hot, but cloudy day and quite humid. I could have spent the time weeding as they're about to take over the whole garden. A greater urge led me to the sea glass shoebox where I spent a happy hour laying out glass in various combinations of shapes, sizes and colours. Result? Several new projects (but alas, no more bezel strip).
This pendant consists of a ruby red glass bead with central crease, aqua and dark lime shards. I balanced the pendant with a sterling silver bar with hammer finish. I'm hanging on to this one until I've re-done the bezels.
This pendant consists of a ruby red glass bead with central crease, aqua and dark lime shards. I balanced the pendant with a sterling silver bar with hammer finish. I'm hanging on to this one until I've re-done the bezels.
Tuesday, 29 June 2010
Jade pendant
This piece of jade - originally with no silver mount or bail - has a large hole drilled near the top. Its owner had noticed a tendency for the pendant to twist round when hung on a cord, and hadn't worn it for a while.
I enclosed the edge of the stone with narrow bezel strip, leaving the reverse of the stone open. I went for a plain, wide bail which mirrors the shape of the jade and also hides the hole.
Tuesday, 22 June 2010
Blue sampler bracelet
A sampler bracelet in silver, with turquoise blue Pandora-style glass beads. I used a variety of techniques in this bracelet, one being employed in the plaited and coiled silver focal bead, the other in the "blackberry" next to the hook fastening. There is a lot of silver in the focal bead which makes the bracelet quite heavy. I'm not happy with the Greek key feature on the left; it'll be replaced by something to balance the opposite side.
Necklace, hammer finish
Necklace/large pendant to match the earrings below.
I had something of a dilemma when it came to the means of suspending this large pendant/series of pendants. Each drop is separate but the customer requested that they be strung on Tiger Tail (fine, nylon-covered stainless steel wire). Stringing them separately would make them liable to overlap as the customer moved. My solution was to fix them in relation to each other across the back using a length of silver wire with a loop at each end - a hidden bail. The effect is one of 5 separate pieces; the reality...one large pendant.
Labels:
hammer finish,
necklace,
pendant,
silver,
Tiger Tail
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Hammered finish silver earrings
Having discovered just how much light is reflected by a hammer finish, I'm using it for more and more pieces. These earrings catch every bit of light going.
Silver leaf
Monday, 17 May 2010
Sea glass pendant - work in progress
Latest sea glass pendant. Pale green frosted glass - possibly part of a bottle base - found on a beach in NE England. The colour of this piece of glass is lovely and will set off a tan nicely. The glass is mounted on a solid piece of silver, wrapped over to enclose the glass. The solid back ensures that light will be reflected back out through the glass, and the enclosing edges or "bezel" hint at stylised waves. 0.5mm thick sheet and 1.5mm silver wire. The large hoop at the top is a support for further embellishment. To be completed.
Hammer finish, silver bangle
Silver cuff bangle with hammer finish and textured stripes. After cutting out the blank the areas to receive a hammer finish were masked off, and the stripes were etched with a wheel (not chemical), firstly across the width of the bangle,and then at right angles. A final run over with a brass brush produced a sort of 3-d effect. The etched areas were then protected during the hammering process. Several rounds of annealing and hammering were needed to render the silver first pliable, then hardened. There's a tendency when hammering for the metal to curl upwards when the bangle should curve the other way, so annealing of the work-hardened silver is essential to achieve this without splitting the metal.
Labels:
annealing,
bangle,
hammer finish,
silver,
texture
Hammer finish silver pendant
Hand-made circular silver pendant with drops and hung from black cord. The pendant is hammer-finished and slightly domed to lie flat against the skin. To form the drops, I hammered lengths of round silver wire flat at one end, rotated them through 90 degrees and hammered the opposite end so they look a bit like propellers. A silver ball and wire was soldered to one end of each drop and then wound onto the pendant.
Cool green, purple and silver bracelet
Hand-made silver bracelet with beads as a focal point, including green Pandora-style beads, purple glass and Thai hill-tribe ribbed beads. A soldered flower, tube spacers, and wrapped "coil" beads were added. This last bead used rather more silver wire than I'd hoped but it's a process I'll try again - perhaps as a whole bangle rather than just a bead. The fastening is adjustable via a scrolled hook and swan-loop feature or adjoining jump rings.
Swirly silver earrings
Sea glass "shard" pendant
Shard of translucent white sea glass. Drilled, and suspended on snake chain with freshwater rice pearl, Swarovski crystal and silver charm. Drilling seaglass is always a nerve-wracking business. There's no guarantee that your special piece of glass isn't going to shatter at the last moment. That's exactly what happened to a beautiful piece of glass I found a year ago. It was large (about 3"x 1.5"), mid-green and shaped like Africa...or, if you turned it over and used your imagination, a bit like India. It now bears no resemblance to either. While wandering about on various beaches I've found several shards like the one shown here. I could have made a striking necklace using several, but will wait to see if they all survive the drilling process. My local DIY store no longer stocks the diamond tipped drill bits I use, so it looks like I'll have to practise some creative wrapping techniques instead.
Monday, 5 April 2010
Hematite, Swarovski, silver earrings
Hematite, Swarovski 4mm Emerald AB and Peridot crystals on sterling silver. The ranbow colours of the Emerald AB is not obvious in this photo. Made for a friend's birthday.
Silver earrings
These started out as two halves of a cat's head soldered together - pointy bits for the ears, spirals for the eyes. I decided the resulting brooch would be too large and the halves would look better turned the other way and finished off as earrings. I'd bought the fine wire to wrap seaglass and semi-precious stones, but it proved to be too fiddly and fine; however, it's perfect for adding woven texture to pieces.
Silver scarf pin
Monday, 1 February 2010
Byzantine bracelet
The first bracelet I made was a box pattern using too fine a gauge silver wire. It looked the part and was very light and slinky, but lacked durability, eventually catching on a desk and falling apart. Lesson learned - make sure the gauge is appropriate.
For this bracelet I followed instructions in Madeline Coles' book "Two-in-One Manual; Jewellery". The pages are cut in half horizontally; projects appear at the top of each page and techniques are demonstrated on the bottom half. By flipping the pages you can match up the project with the appropriate technique. I found this helpful as a beginner.
There are lots more chain maille designs on the internet - a fascinating and absorbing subject.
Knitting - stitch markers
Finally decided to abandon the tatty bits of yarn that currently serve as stitch markers. As I already have the raw materials - used in my earrings and necklaces - I produced these in a mix of silver plated and sterling silver wire, Swarovski crystals, cats' eyes and various glass beads.
Although the ones shown here have open rings, I'll solder some closed and test-drive to make sure they're a practical size/weight.
Ruffled wristwarmers
Alpaca and Kidsilk Haze ruffled wrist-warmers, courtesy of a free pattern by Brenda Dayne on the Knitty site. Made two pairs of these - one as a Christmas present for my sister, and one for me (of course).
Working in the round with Kidsilk yarn on a too-large circular needle wasn't a good idea. As I didn't have enough double-ended pins I opted for straight ones and a seam. I found it fiddly to incorporate the beads at cast-on (my problem, not the pattern's), so I crocheted the beads onto the cast-on row afterwards.
For the second pair, I abandoned the beads completely at cast-on to avoid the possibility of catching the yarn. Not as pretty, but practical for me. Easy to knit, and toasty warm.
Saturday, 30 January 2010
Sea glass bead choker
I now have a collection of small sea glass "beads" in a variety of colours. Common shades are deep to pale green, pale blue and white. Depending on location, brighter blues, yellows and reds (rare)can be found. Different beaches produce different shapes and sizes.
These beads, separated by Swarovski pearls, are threaded onto sterling silver wire. Width from LH bead to RH bead is 4".
Labels:
beachcombing,
beads,
sea glass,
silver,
Swarovski
Seaglass pendant
Another interest is making silver jewellery. It started as beadwork on silver plated wire but as my taste moved towards more elaborate beads I wanted to set them off using sterling silver. A few "how to" books set me off, and I was helped along by the videos by Luis Moreno on Youtube. I now have a rudimentary knowledge of cutting, annealing, forming, soldering and pickling silver. I'll never produce the fine work seen in jewellers' shops but keeping it simple ensures my pieces are unique.
This pendant started off as a piece of slightly curved sea-worn glass found on Redcar beach - 3.5" long. As it's so irregular in shape I found it difficult to work out what to do with it. The silver which forms the mount had to be annealed to make it soft enough for forming without having to use a mallet. I employed a cook's torch, and dinner spoon handles were used as "pushers" to form the silver around the glass edges.
The pendant is finished with a snake chain.
This pendant started off as a piece of slightly curved sea-worn glass found on Redcar beach - 3.5" long. As it's so irregular in shape I found it difficult to work out what to do with it. The silver which forms the mount had to be annealed to make it soft enough for forming without having to use a mallet. I employed a cook's torch, and dinner spoon handles were used as "pushers" to form the silver around the glass edges.
The pendant is finished with a snake chain.
Friday, 29 January 2010
First up
Wheatsheaf jumper/tunic
This pattern appeared on the front cover of the Sunday Times supplement on 9 Dec 1984. I wrote off for the pattern (no online resources then) and made it up using an Acrylic/Wool mix. This is the second I've made, this time using Jaeger Matchmaker Merino which knits up beautifully.
I replaced the lower ribbed band with the pointy one you see here as I wanted the jumper to fall straight and not cling to my hips. I also added a higher roll collar and added my own "Thompson" mouse at the neck. In the photo I've pulled the neckline forward to show the mouse; this gives the impression the rib is slanting - it's not. The stalks are cabled, and the wheat ears are embroidered on afterwards.
The article in which this pattern was mentioned featured "The Knitting Bishop of Leicester" - a sort of religious Kaffe Fassett - and some of his fabulously colourful knitted creations.
Labels:
Bishop,
cable,
Jaeger,
Kaffe Fassett,
knitting,
matchmaker,
merino,
wool
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