Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handmade. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 09, 2015

Meet Eric Ennis at Ornamentea


We are showing five beautiful works of art by Eric Ennis this month and are so happy to host a reception for him on Thursday, September 17th. He'll be on hand to talk about his work and share stories from his career.

Eric has been an opera singer, a couturier and dressmaker to brides and Miss America (five of them!) and is an inspirational artist. His beadwork is exacting and colorful. His stories make us smile, and we want you to get a chance to visit with him.

Please RSVP to Eric's reception (it's free, we just want to know how many cookies to bake!)

The above image is from an article about Eric in Our State Magazine. See that article here. 

Monday, March 09, 2015

New Class - The Montford Bezel Necklace


This is one of our newest classes and I'm really happy with how it turned out. We have a grouping of classes we like to call Metals Bootcamp. This is one of the new offerings in that series. These classes are designed for beginners who want to learn to create a piece of jewelry and have little - or no - familiarity with silver smithing basics. Each class covers using a saw, using a butane torch, basic forging or forming, soldering, etc. Often, we get people taking more than one of those classes to perfect and tune up specific skills, or just because they like the project.

Designing this class was a group project with Sarah Tector (S. Tector Metals), Sonya Coulson Rook (Metamorphosis) and myself. We started with a list of materials and techniques and then worked from that point. Designing jewelry for classes in a group is fun. It's chatty, and there are lots of jokes, and we make references in rapid-fire patter. At one point this was referred to as 'yoga after-class wear' and 'kinda cowgirl' and 'kinda beach' and 'perfect with a hand-knit scarf' which makes no sense at all. Imagine a cowgirl wearing this, with a scarf, to the beach after her yoga class.

Wait, maybe that works...

Sarah and Sonya are both trained metalsmiths who produce a jewelry line. They have top-notch skills. Me, I learned to solder in the dark ages, I got an art ed degree, then made jewelry myself (but not silversmith work.) I don't have the assembly skills they have, I know just enough to be dangerous (and to say 'hmm, that's too hard, let's try a jump ring!' when it applies!) I'm the Creative Director/Art Teacher of the bunch; I tone them down if it gets too difficult or uses tools that aren't in our basic tool kit.

We want each Metals Bootcamp class to be an exposure to a technique or skill that can be done at home. Here in Raleigh, NC, there are about ten places where you can take a metalsmithing class in a $100,000 studio with every possible tool at your disposal. That's nice, but it's like learning to make a cake at a restaurant kitchen and then going home to your microwave. No baked goods for you!

What tools do we use in our Metals Bootcamp classes?
A butane torch
A soldering surface
A saw frame
Saw blades (plus cut lube!)
A bench pin with V-slot
A chasing hammer, or rawhide or riveting hammer (or all three!)
A bench block
Chain nose pliers, round nose pliers, wire cutters
A tiny crock pot filled with Sparex or Citric Acid pickle

maybe we also use riveting tools, parallel pliers, metal hole punches, dapping blocks, or other 'oddball' tools, but the basic 8 in that list are all under $200 at our store, and could get you started metalsmithing. Tomorrow.

So, wanna take a class? Check it out, here. 

Oh, and this is a detail of the BACK of the Montford necklace...gotta love that Sarah! She snuck in some snazzy sawing.