Another slump bead day

I spent most of my time in the studio, today, trying out more ideas with the slump beads, working in a little larger size.

I wanted to do what I was able to do with the smaller slump beads. That is, to get the heat of the cup warmer  to expand the second half of the bead as it dried. I tried it with three of the larger size beads, but it didn’t work. I still think the beads will look great, but I was going for a puffy little tummy like on the smaller bead below.

 

Meanwhile, the bead levitation experiment totally worked!

 

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Patina on copper

An experiment. I have only tried this once before, on two bronze/copper metal clay pieces that hit the trash pile soon after. So this really felt like the first serious attempt at patina.

In trying to step back a little from the über expensive PMC, I started thinking about what to do with some small copper discs, and how I might combine them with sterling silver sheet. I dapped the discs into nice little hemispheres, drilled holes in the center, and hung them on some wire. I then suspended them in a jar with paper towel that had been soaked with vinegar and ammonia. I tossed a little sea salt on top because I thought that might make a difference. Other than knowing that these 3 ingredients would cause some kind of reaction on the surface of the copper, I didn’t really know what I was doing. Sometimes it’s easier to just go ahead and try something when you don’t know what you’re doing, don’t you think? I mean, there were no expectations of how this should come out, so I couldn’t really do it wrong. It helped knowing that my friend Trish has come up with some beautiful patinas on copper by just winging it.

Day 1, the beginning:

I let the jar set for 2 days. Though after the first day, I just dumped the copper discs right on top of the paper towel and sprinkled more salt of them. When I took them out, they looked like this. Kind of wet and gooey. Um, I thought patina was dry on the surface….I left them out on paper towel and went off to my workshop weekend.

Once I came home they were dry, but the green flaked off easily. So I took them to a ventilated spot and sprayed them on each side with a fixative spray. When they were dry (a day later) I used Renaissance wax to seal them again. I’m not sure how much this will protect the patina. But I’m not planning to wear these as beads next to my skin or clothing. I’m going to rivet the discs onto silver shapes for a dangle earring. As with any new design, I’ll test it out myself, first, for wearability.

You know, this is kind of a stinky, lengthy process. I have bought some beautiful patinated beads from Shannon LeVart at Miss Ficklemedia. Now there’s a woman who really knows her metals and patinas. One could learn a lot from her about this process. She has a tutorial available for purchase on her Etsy site. Someday I might buy the package and try her technique. Meanwhile, I can keep experimenting a la Trish, or buy my components from Shannon.

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No A.B. last night

The aurora borealis was not visible last night. The temperature was down to 8º with lots of wind when I got up at 3 a.m. to reload the wood stove, so I was just as glad not to be going outside for a better look at the sky.

However, the angel Gabriel made an appearance this morning on the glass door of my wood stove. That was almost as good as seeing the northern lights.  An Elvis sighting would have been most excellent, but hey, a visit from Gabe was pretty cool, too.

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Draping jigs

Today I made some wire jigs on which to drape metal clay. I just learned this technique from Fred Woell’s workshop last weekend. The idea is that metal clay, draped over metal (in this case the wire), will dry quickly and release easily when the supporting piece of metal is heated. Draping the wet clay allows for some interesting shapes to be made into beads.

PMC shapes drying on an electric cup warmer.

Hollow beads ready to be fired in the kiln.

I had planned for such a long studio day today, but it took me forever to get settled into work. Some days are just like that. I finally got around to it after catching up on some reading and taking a little nap. The sun came out for a while this afternoon so I also went for a low tide walk on the beach while the temperature was still around 40º.  Considering how unfocused I felt, I was actually happy with what I accomplished.

The temperature is already down to 15º and I will set my alarm to wake up and add wood to the wood stove. Bruce usually wakes up at some point every night and refills the wood stove, but tonight he is away. Tonight is also supposed to be a good night for Northern Lights, with all of the recent solar flare activity. So far, there is nothing but a lot of stars in the sky. (Which is pretty special in itself and I never get tired of seeing the stars here. ) I’ll be checking the sky again when I get up to put wood in the stove. If there is anything going on, aurora borealis-wise, it will be worth it to bundle up and go out to see it.

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Another day off island

March, lionesque, on the morning boat ride. Northwest winds 35 knots. (For landlubbers that’s about 40 mph) Enough to provide a choppy ride between Islesford and Great Cranberry.

The sun was strong, though not warm enough, first thing this morning, to make the walk to the Northeast Harbor parking lot anything but treacherous.

By 3:30 p.m. the wind had dropped out, providing calm seas for the ride home.

With the off-island day behind me, quality time spent with my mom, I am psyched to be planning to spend the whole day in my studio tomorrow. Bruce leaves at 6:30 a.m., for the Maine Fishermen’s Forum. He’ll be away for a few days which means I have only my own schedule to consider; a time I look forward to every March. I might just decide to work through dinner and eat Cheerios before I go to bed.

 

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Less of this, please…

No matter how much fun we have had, I am now getting sick of snow, ice, freezing rain, and wind.

Bring on the sun and the melting snow!

 

 


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Workshop day 2

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Too pooped to post

That’s what I was last night. Suffice it to say it was a great day with a great group of fellow students. We learned some funky new techniques for making hollow beads without firing an inner core material. Fred’s mind is always thinking of the next, most interesting way to manipulate PMC. I barely want to take the time to post photos.

I could look around this studio all day and never get tired of seeing the collection of lines and textures.

Ruh roh……..

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Can you see Great Cranberry?

Neither could I. But that didn’t stop me from taking the 11:30 mailboat to Northeast Harbor so I could drive to Deer Isle to stay with Fred Woell and Pat Wheeler. This was the third time this winter that a snowstorm threatened a weekend trip I did not want to pass up. So, in my little Subaru, I carefully passed cars that couldn’t make it up some of the hills. Fortunately I ended up behind plow trucks several times and I made it safely over roads that were not great, driving 30 mph. The afternoon brought rain on top of snow, with increasing winds and dropping temperatures.  It sounds like an icy mess for tomorrow. Good thing I’m already right where I want to be. The PMC bead workshop starts at 10 a.m. tomorrow but this is what it looks like the night before:

And, there’s a bird in my room.

 

 

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Many little parts…

…made for a whole good day.

It was Thursday, matinee day. Before I left the house to catch the 11:30 boat, I packed as much as I could into the morning. I made a double batch of almond macaroons and a batch of chocolate sorbet to cool in the fridge (so I could put it in the ice cream freezer after I returned home on the 5 p.m. boat). I mixed up dough for 2 loaves of sourdough bread, ran and emptied the dishwasher and emptied the compost bucket. I might have done more but for the fact that there was a lot of activity at the bird feeder. I kept stopping to grab my binoculars. Chickadees and nuthatches were there as the usual loyal suspects, but they had friends; winter visitors who don’t show up every year. Redpolls!

There seemed to be a few hoary redpolls mixed in, (though they were pretty well behaved.)

On the ground, there was also a female white-winged crossbill. A bird with a serious overbite. It was a good morning for birdwatching from the kitchen sink.

And then off I went to see “The King’s Speech” with my Mom, who loved it as much as I did, which made for a perfect afternoon.

 

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