Showing posts with label wire work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wire work. Show all posts

Saturday, January 22, 2011

How to Make Your Own Wire Jewelry Hooks-Video on Demand for Jewel School

It's Teeny Tiny Madge Blowing a Kiss!

Hey There Boys and Girls

It's time for this week's Video on Demand for Jewel School! Follow this link to watch! This week I show you how to make your own wire hook clasps. Note: to make an s-hook you can mark the center of the wire as a guide so the two sides of the 's' are equal. I mentioned that but things have to get cut or these videos would go on forever! I do everything by eye, but that's not always the best way when you're starting out.

Enjoy and tune in next week, we've got a fun wire twister and jump ring maker project!

xoxo
Madge

Friday, January 21, 2011

Queen of Hearts!

Queen of Hearts Earrings and Card Copyright 2011 Margot Potter for Jewel School
(Click on image above to read text...just do it.)


This post is part of the FaveCrafts Finished on the 15th Blog Hop, click the icon above to visit their blog and see lots and lots of crafty creations!


When we last spoke...okay when I last whined...I had just emerged from a very, very long week. I spent to today FINALLY cleaning the temporary studio. It's still filled with boxes, but the Jeweler's Bench has been cleared and my desk is no longer riddled with piles of wire bits, beads, plastic baggies, spools of wire, papers that need to be filed, mysterious empty wrappers...and the other things that tend to pile up in a studio when one is working fiendishly to meet deadlines.

This month's newsletter for JTV just went live! I am so proud of the project above. It was one of those grace under fire moments and the earrings and the card turned out even better than I'd hoped. Every once and a while that happens. My attempt at mastering the Viking Knit Tool on the other hand...not so graceful. I will prevail galdangy!

I called this project Queen of Hearts. Those of you who read this drivel on a regular basis will recall that I posted this photo sans text a while back. I still can't quite decide the gender of this Victorian cutie. Can you?! Either way, it's one of my favorite photos from my ephemera collection.

Follow this link for instructions to make these earrings and all of the beady goodness in this month's Jewel School Newsletter!

Tomorrow I'll share the link to my latest Video on Demand for JTV!

xoxo
Madge

Friday, January 14, 2011

New Jewel School Video: Making Earring Wires

Teeny tiny and highly animated Madge is perhaps a little too excited about earring wires!

Have you ever made your own ear wires? It's so easy! Just use a half hard 20 gauge wire and a few key tools and in moments you can create custom made earring hooks and hoops. In this week's video tutorial for Jewelry Television's Jewel School I show you how.

Just follow this link to watch the video.

You'll never have to buy pre-made earring findings again! Huzzah!

Cheers
Madge

Friday, December 10, 2010

Holiday Sentiments Wire and Crystal Ornament Video Tutorial for Jewel School!


Okee dokee...take two! The video is playing now and all is well! Follow this link to see my latest video tutorial for JTV's Jewel School! I share a fab Artistic Wire and SWAROVSKI ELEMENTS Holiday Sentiments ornament, see the Joy ornament above. This is really easy to customize using any words or names you like. You can use thicker wire or larger beads, whatever tickles your fancy, Fancy.

Until next time...craft on with your bad selves!

Cheers,
Madge

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Free Jewelry Making Project #4 from Bead Chic

Steel City Earrings from Bead Chic by Margot Potter ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

I can't believe this is my final free project from Bead Chic! Where does the time go? This one is a little more complex and a little bit funky. You can refine it or make it funkier as you choose. I love the primitive look of annealed iron wire, you can buy it at hardware stores and some places online. It's a little rusty, so you need to clean it before you wear it!

I enjoy bending and shaping wire and the nice thing about a very stiff wire like iron is that it maintains its shape without too much need for work hardening, yet it takes to being hammered beautifully. These earrings are made from three artfully bent wire segments that swing and sway separately from one another. I added freshwater pearls suspended in some organic wire wrapping with a thin gauge of silver plated wire. These, to me, have a Sundance Catalog appeal.

In fact...when I pitched this book here is how I summed it up:

Banana Republic and Sundance Catalog have a latte at Starbucks.

Chic, modern, upscale with just a little edge!

The variation for this project is created by the lovely Ms. Barbe Saint-John. You'll have to buy the book to get the step by step photos and to see Barbe's gorgeous earrings. You can also leave a comment here to win the last free signed copy of the book!

xoxo
Madge

Bead Chic
Steel City Earrings
Chapter One
Scale



Materials
2 8mm faceted cream freshwater pearls
24 gauge silver plated wire
20 gauge annealed iron wire
Gun metal French clips

Tools
Chasing hammer
Mini anvil
Large round dowel (I used a large marker)
Small dowel (I used a metal end of a rat tail comb)
Memory wire shears
Round nose pliers
Chain nose pliers
Wire cutters

Tip: Play with the wire to get a feel for it, different wires have different levels of malleability. These do not have to be perfect...so don’t sweat it if they aren’t!

1. Cut a 3” segment of steel wire using your memory wire shears.

2. Bend the center around a large marker.

3. Hammer the ‘u’ section flat using the flat end of your chasing hammer.

4. Cut a 1 2/8” section of wire and use the tip of your round nose pliers to create a very small loop in both ends.

5. Cut a 1 ¼” section of wire and bend it over the metal end of a rat tail comb.

6. Use your round nose pliers to create a loop in both wire ends.

7. Wrap a 24 gauge wire tightly to one side of the top section of your ‘u’ shaped component as in photo moving the wire down the core.

8. Wrap wire around core in a free form manner.

9. Thread a pearl on end of wire.

10. Thread wire around opposite side tightly and wrap remaining wire moving up the core in a freeform manner as before.

11. Cut off excess wire and use chain nose pliers to tuck your wire tails in.

12. Connect your segments together as follows: Attach the ‘v’ shaped component to the loops on the end of your bar component. Attach the ‘u’ shaped component to the bar. The loops should all face backwards so the components can swing freely when worn.

13. Attach your ear wires to the top of each ‘v’ section.

Friday, September 11, 2009

The Evolution of a Jewelry Design

Almost...but not quite...take one...La Cage Prototype One (Before) Copyright Margot Potter 2009
La Cage (final) Copyright Margot Potter 2009

Incognito First Strand Copyright Margot Potter

Yesterday I started working on some 'in-use' designs. These are designs created for manufacturers that showcase their products in innovative and interesting ways. This work isn't easy because there are perameters and limitations you have to navigate. I've been working with architectural and sculptural wire designs for many years. My brain likes to think dimensionally, which is why I should really study casting and soldering and jewelry making techniques that would allow me to fully expand on that tendency. For now, I spent a lot of time making wire do what it doesn't want to do naturally and making a lot of glorious messes in the process.

There is value in those glorious messes, because that's where my brain is formulating new pathways. I began with a series of woven wire bits and pieces working on some ideas I had for dimensional designs and eventually I created this pendant, which I really like. It's basically a concave 'cage' in which I've suspended the new
CRYSTALLIZED-Swarovski Elements disk. It's created from a single core wire wrapped with a thinner gauge of binding wire and crystals. After I finished the pendant I needed to create a foundation. I began with this intuitive beaded design and realized when it was finished that...it wasn't quite gelling. So I put it out there for other folks to see and got some great feedback. In the meantime I began reworking the foundation and came up with this.

I hammered some of the metal components and left others shiny. I created a small hook with the same wire I used in the pendant. I really like how the foundation supports the pendant without detracting from it. Everything leads the eye towards center and this looks really fabulous on a neck.

I know that seems sort of silly to state, but I can't tell you how many times I've created something I think is awesome and then tried it on and realized it didn't work on a body. It's a really good idea to try on your designs or throw them on a jewelry form as you're working just to be sure they're wearable.

I'm using the core beaded necklace for a multi-strand idea. (Forgive the lighting, it's dismal here today and I had a heckuva time getting decent shots!) I added a little felt flower from ArtGirlz I embellished with a sequin and a crystal on a head pin. I'm seeing chains and exposed wire strands layering down from this top strand in a bib effect. I'll show you the final result when I get there.

Back to the bead mines!

xoxo
Madge

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Black Forest Necklace for Art Beads

Black Forest Necklace copyright 2009 Margot Potter
(Click on images to view in detail)

The fine folks from Art Beads asked me to select some CRYSTALLIZED-Swarovski Elements from their website recently for review. I have been working with the Create Your Style initiative since my first book and last year had the distinction of being named a Create Your Style with CRYSTALLIZED-Swarovski Elements Ambassador. So to say I love crystal...would be a vast understatement! I had a darker, moodier design in mind so I used olivine, tanzanite and black diamond as my color palette with gun metal and anodized steel accents.

The new aquiline bead is such an interesting shape, I envisioned a vine with some funky shaped fruit dangling off of it. The center rock pendant is another new shape I'm loving, notice if you can that it has both frosted and sparkling elements. I added a pop of purple featuring the newly launced xilion cut in 6mm in tanzanite, but since they seem to be sold out, you can opt for the 5301 in the same color.

Beads this gorgeous don't need a lot of gee gaws and doo dads, so I made a straightforward and simply striking design. I call this Black Forest.

Maybe I can find a home for it in a bead magazine...I'll keep you posted!

Cheers,
Madge