Showing posts with label #stampington. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #stampington. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 1, 2018

Let's talk about crystals...

I have always been fascinated with crystals...

They seem so magical to me.

Recently we took a family trip and panned for treasures at a local cavern and got this great haul.




But sometimes you may not have the funds or access to the real thing so why not try to make your own?

I did a tutorial for making ICE Resin crystals that you can find  here.


And I used amethyst crystals with vintage spoons and resin to make these that appeared in GreenCraft magazine from Stampington.







I found a few wonderful free tutorials for making your own.

This one looks like fun... click here for tutorial.



And this one on the Sculpey blog shows how to make faceted beads which can
easily be applied to making crystals.


No matter how you use them, find them, or make them, there is no denying that crystals are magical.

I'd love to see if you create something using crystals.

Thanks for stopping by...

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Siren's Song necklace

Time to dust off the blog...Do people still blog?  Seems like Instagram and Pinterest have taken over the world. 
I am dusting this old girl off in order to share some tutorials with you.
My first is for this Siren's Song Necklace I made 2 years ago. It took me a whole month to make the beads and components and about a week to put the piece together.



I ended up sending this one to Stampington and they published it in an issue of Belle Armoire Jewelry.  It took a couple years to get to publication, but it was worth it.


This post has the basics from the article, but no step-by-step photos.  I won't be able to take a month to remake them and take pictures so you'll just have to let your own imagination fill in the missing blanks.


What you will need:

Supplies
Scissors
2 pieces of Plexiglas
Waxed Linen Cord
RIT Dye-Purple, Aquamarine, Navy Blue, Green
Alcohol
Plastic containers with lids
Slotted Spoons
Micro beads
Sand

Varathane Clear Gloss Water-Based Interior Polyurethane

Metallic Lustres by Deco Art (all colors)
Bamboo Skewers
Floral foam
Small alphabet rubber stamps
Sculpey Mold Maker
Seashells, sand dollars, starfish
Ocean themed pendants
Premo Sculpey Clay in White PE02 5001
Premo Sculpey Clay in Cobalt Blue, Green
Stampers
Texture tools
Spray bottle of water
Baby wipes
Sculpey Clay Conditioning machine
Sculpey Etch-n-pearl
Steel Rebar Wire
Heavy Duty Side Cutters
Needle Nose Pliers
Sculpey Super Slicer
Vinyl gloves
Silk Strips
19 gauge black steel wire
Hammer
Bench Block


Step-by-step instructions

Making the beads:

·         For beads, condition the white clay, then pinch off a piece of clay and roll it into a ball. Then poke a hole through the center of the bead.  Repeat from the other side of the bead. Add texture or words.

·         For the quote pendants, roll a ball of conditioned clay about the size of a golf ball.  Flatten with fingers and press the clay between two pieces of Plexiglas that have been misted with water to your desired thickness. Stamp desired design into disk.   Poke holes in the pendant.

·         For Disk Beads, roll clay into a ball and flatten between fingers.  Poke a hole in the bead.  Leave on the skewer and roll over textured surface or roll into micro beads.

·         For unique beads and focals, use Sculpey Mold Maker to make your own molds from seashells, pendants, and starfish. Then use the molds to make your own unique beads and focals.  Roll clay into a ball and press mold onto the ball.  Either use the skewer to make a hole through the whole bead or add a piece of wire bent into a U shape for a bail.

Following manufacturer’s directions, bake the beads in toaster oven. Keep in mind that thicker beads will require more bake time than thin beads.


Finishing the beads:

·         Once the beads are baked and cool, make dyes by adding about 2 tablespoons of liquid dye to about one cup of alcohol.  Mix thoroughly.  Add white beads and focals to the dye bath.  When you have achieved the look you want, remove from the dye bath with a slotted spoon.  Rinse with cool water until it runs clear.  Spread out on trays or paper plates to dry.

·         Use DecoArt’s Metallic Lustres waxes to add color to beads.  Layer multiple colors over beads and pendants using your fingers.  Once dry, buff with a soft cloth.
·         Seal beads with Varathane.  I place my beads on a bamboo skewer and dip them into a small jar with the sealer.  Then I set each skewer in a board that my husband drilled with holes.

·         For the beads with micro beads and sand, I dipped the bead in Varathane and then dipped it into a small container of sand or micro beads.  For some, I mixed the micro beads right into a small amount of sealer and then rolled the bead in the mixture.  I also dipped some beads into the Varathane and then sprinkled the beads with micro beads all over.





Making Clasps:


·         Make a necklace clasp with needle nose pliers and a piece of wire. Curl end around needle nose pliers to make a small loop.  Turn over so loop is on top of the pliers and bend around to make a hook.  Grasp end of wire with needle nose pliers and curl up into a loop.  Harden wire by pounding it with a hammer several times on each side. Make heart loop for clasp by cutting a piece of rebar wire about 3 inches long. Bend in the middle and pull the ends so they make a loop at the bottom.  Use pliers to bend tops of the heart. Harden wire.


To Make the Necklace

*For the necklace back, use 4 silk strips and loosely braid 3, adding and dropping a strip in an organic way repeatedly.  Add wire clasp and loops to ends so each necklace strand can be added. If the piece is too long, you can shorten it by knotting it in the middle.

* Build your collar by creating each necklace strand on waxed linen cord or silk strips.  Add them to the necklace as you work to check lengths and placement



Of course you can use these techniques to make your own  earrings, bracelets, rings etc...  This is just a starting point for your own fabulous creations.  Please feel free to comment with a link of your own goodies.  I'd love to see what you come up with.


If you are reading this, I'd love if you took a moment to comment so I know you are still out there...


 Thanks for stopping by....

Sunday, August 28, 2016

GreenCraft Magazine...And a Giveaway!

Have you seen the newest issue of GreenCraft magazine?

It is fantastic.


So many fantastic projects.

I love green crafts...

Reusing, up-cycling and recycling are so important to all of us.


I am tickled to have a couple projects in this issue.

Here are my Stubby Pencil necklaces.


 I love how a little clay and some paint can change something that would get thrown away into something so cute to wear.
I

My dear friend Melinda Barnett used some stubby pencils too.

Check out her adorable earrings.



My tiny shampoo bottle reliquary is in this issue.



One of my favorite projects is the cuffs made from shampoo bottles.


Ella Wilson uses candy tubes to make some really cute ways to store change for laundry.


One of the new articles is a round up of projects all made from the same material.

This issue has a round up of things made from sweaters.

See that bag with the red heart?

That was mine.

I so loved those cupcake pincushions and that sweet little dachshund (also from Melinda Barnett).


Melinda Barnett's amazing plant markers made from old spoons are on the cover.


I am so excited to tell you that I am giving away this issue of GreenCraft.

To win, leave a comment with your favorite recycling project you have done.  be sure to leave your email so I can get in touch with you to let you know you have won...

Contest is open to U.S. residents only

I will choose a winner from the comments on September 4th and announce the winner on the 5th.

Good Luck!

Thanks for stopping by....

Saturday, April 23, 2016

And the Winner is.....

I am so delighted to announce that the winner of the free issue of Jewelry Affaire magazine is....


Gwen Simmons!

I have emailed Gwen to let her know her weekend is off to a great start.

Thanks to everyone for your sweet comments.

It is a great issue.

I hope you get a chance to look at it.

It is available at most craft stores or on newsstands. 

You can also get it directly from Stampington.

Thanks for stopping by...

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Workbench Wednesday...making soap

Happy Wednesday.

The project I am sharing today you can find in the Spring 2016 issue of Willow and Sage.

I figured I better share it before the summer issue comes out.


Last summer I spent a morning making melt and pour soaps.


Looking at the pictures, I can almost smell them.


Complete recipes and directions are in this issue of Willow and Sage.


The great thing about melt and pour soaps is how easy they are to make.


And you can use just about any container for a mold as long as you treat it to release the soap.


Once the soap is made, the best part is the packaging.


I wanted my soaps to have a rustic look.


This is the Gardener's Delight bar.


Off to the woodshed for a log....


Then to my husband's garage to use his saw.


I ended up using his drill press too for the holes.


His suggestion and it made the process much easier and faster.


All the rest of the packaging details came from my studio/garage.


Sometimes the prettiest pictures take in the tiniest details.


I gave a bunch of these soaps to my dear friends at work at Christmas time.


Looking at these photos makes me long for summer days.


They will be here before you know it.


In the summer, anyplace is a work area for me, especially outside.


Our days are getting longer.


It is not warm enough consistently to feel like spring is definitely here to stay.


But there are other signs...


Our grass could use a cutting.


In the morning I can hear the birds singing.


Some flowers are coming out and blossoming.

And the fish in our pond come lazily to the surface and swim about.

We are almost there...


To finish the packaging, I made tags for each kind of soap with polymer clay.


I love the way the tags turned out...


I used the silicone molds from a former workbench Wednesday.


And then I just stamped them with tiny alphabet stamps as well.


I used a bit of watered down black paint in the letters to make them stand out.


 And rubbed the tags with some DecoArt Metallic Lustres.


They are among my favorites because I use my fingers and get dirty when I use them.


So, before it is no longer available on the newsstand, run out and pick up ma copy of Willow and Sage Spring 2016 issue to see how to make these and many more fabulous bath and body products.