Skip to main content

New Earrings Using Patterned Bronze Sheet


In my last blog post I wrote about some patterned bronze sheet I'd made using my rolling mill and that I'd then made some new earrings with the results.

One of the pairs is made with a leaf vein texture. It's really easy to get a mirror image of the leaf vein texture by sandwiching a skeleton leaf between two sheets of metal which is what I did for these earrings. I then trimmed around the outline of the leaf shape and added a curve to the leaves so they looked a bit more like real leaves.


 I used this forming block...


I bought this on ebay a while ago and only recently found out it's designed to be a bangle forming block but it can be used to form curves in lots of different shapes. It always makes me think of a child's toy :D



It added a nice curve to the leaf shape which is what I was after. I then soldered a jump ring to the top of the earrings and pierced out the centre to form the hanging hole for the earwires.


I tidied up the edges of the pierced holes with the help of a file and my flexshaft then decided how to decorate the earrings. I had originally planned to add a cabochon near the bottom then I realized the curve would make that a bit of a fiddle to do. So I kept it simple with two silver balls near the top instead!


I used the bezels and cabs I was going to put on the leaf earrings and added them to these bronze heart earrings instead.


My bezel setting weapons...


I try to avoid using metal bezel rollers/rockers whenever possible after ruining one too many cab settings right at the very end of the whole making process. Instead I use a toothbrush handle and half a wooden clothes peg. Wood and plastic are softer than metal and stone so if you do slip as you're setting your stone you won't end up with a scratched cab or bezel. Sometimes if the bezel is a bit hard to move I will use a metal bezel rocker..... but very carefully! 

These bullet shape bronze earrings used sheet textured using a bought brass texture sheet.


I soldered on the hanging loops the easiest way I could find. Adding the finishing bits - loops, jump rings and earwires is my least favourite type of soldering and normally when I'm likely to make a mess of things!

I formed the loops from sterling silver wire then flowed some solder on the ends on one side. I then sat the earring on top of the loop and put a copper disc on top of the loop towards the top. This pushed the loop up at the ends under the earring and made sure they was good contact between the two so that it would solder properly.


I covered the solder join between the two layers of bronze with a paste made from rouge powder and water. This will stop the solder reflowing and messing up the front of the earring. Then I hit the top of the earring with the flame and watched for the solder to flow at the point where the silver loop emerged from under the earring. Doing it this way mean the weight of the earring stops anything moving {and me swearing}.


 After checking the soldering is good the earrings go into the pickle pot then a soak in super pickle to remove the copper plating that forms when you heat and pickle bronze. Any excess solder was removed and the ends of the wire smoothed down before the earrings were oxidized in LOS.








Copyright © 2015 Cinnamon Jewellery. All rights reserved.

Comments

  1. Thanks for sharing your process Tracy. The idea to use a jump ring to look like an eyelet is brilliant, I was showing your work (these earrings) to my students in class today and we were wowing it

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Divya! I feel very honoured to think you showed your students my post :D

      Delete
  2. Your new pieces are amazing! I love how real the texture looks of the leaves. The stone bezel setting is beautiful on the heart.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Val, I really love using leaf skeletons for texture.

      Delete
  3. Beautiful earrings! I especially love the leaves :)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Your comments and questions are very welcome!
If you would prefer to contact me directly please use the contact form on my "get in touch" page.

Popular posts from this blog

Combining Soldering And Enamel

The need to make cute, brightly coloured enamel studs propelled me into the world of combining soldering with enamel a couple of years ago. I knew from reading up on it that it was possible to enamel and solder on the same piece but wasn't too confident I was able to do it back then. It was a slightly embarrassing occurance that made me just get on with - I'd made some enamel studs with glued on stud posts. I'd used 2 part epoxy resin which was a job in itself as it set hard after 5 minutes so I had to keep mixing more up. The finished studs looked ok but that little voice in my head kept asking "are you sure you want to use glue?" I wasn't but didn't think I had any other way to do it so I used glue. I sold my first pair and merrily sent them on their way to Canada. A couple of week later the buyer got in touch to say the stud post had come off one of the earrings and the other was hanging off. I was mortified, apologized profusely and refunded her m

Etching Silver Using Nail Art Stamps

So my love/hate relationship with etching sterling silver continues. I've tried a few times now and always end up with different results most of them not that great to be honest. I've tried connecting the silver and a piece of copper to a 9v battery and also heating the ferric nitrate. Sometimes the results are good sometimes not so good. I currently have an etched piece of silver sheet waiting to be reticulated and rid it of the mess that is the etched "pattern".  I now know that using stamps and Stayz On ink just doesn't work with silver - the time needed to etch using ferric nitrate is much longer than etching copper and the ink starts to wear away after about an hour. This results in the pattern being patchy as the resist is eaten away and the silver ends up quite lumpy and course looking. I have yet to try using pnp paper. I don't know why but it all seems a bit of a faff to do. I don't have a laser printer so would need to find somewhere or

Embossing Metal With My Sizzix Bigshot

I must admit up until a few weeks ago I was vaguely familiar with the name Sizzix but as to what you actually did with a "Sizzix" I was completely in the dark! That was until I stumbled across a video from Vintaj showing how you could use their embossing folders with a Bigshot to create designs on metal ("metal" - my favourite word after chocolate!) I was really impressed and itching to have a go, I just needed a Bigshot........ I waited a few weeks then when the urge to possess one overcame me I went out debit card at the ready..............and the shop had sold out! So I trundled off to The Range on the off chance and came home clutching my own surprisingly heavy pink and black wonder machine. It sat on the dining room table for a couple of days while I waited for the embossing folders I'd ordered online to arrive then the time came to start playing! I started with some pre-cut 24g copper hearts and the Wildflower Vines and the Butterfly Swirls Deco