Monday, April 22, 2013

Tropical Dreams

I'm laying on the couch feeling sorry for myself because my knee went out last night and I can barely walk.  Codeine helps, but it makes me feel soooo sleepy.  While drifting off into a codeine-induced mental haze, I started wishing I was on a warm tropical beach instead of my couch.  I thought of the remote beach we have visited several times in Zancudo, Costa Rica.  Ahhhh, if only I were there, pain-free and splashing through the waves.....

Copper Starfish Discs by Kristi Bowman 

Anchors Away Bead Set by Diana Ptaszynski 

Moonlit Ocean Wave Pendant by Jenny Davies-Reazor


Turquoise Ocean Beads by Sue Kennedy

Sand Dollar Necklace by Linda Landig


Zancudo Beach, Costa Rica


Linda Landig
Linda Landig Jewelry


Sunday, April 21, 2013

A Rose for love

This coming Tuesday, 23rd April, is St George's Day. In the UK the Welsh celebrate St David's Day, the Scots celebrate St Andrew's Day and, well, everyone celebrates St Patrick's Day along with the Irish, but strangely enough the English (I'm mainly English with a bit of Scottish, Welsh, Irish and German blood in the mix!) don't really celebrate St George's Day.It apparently fell out of fashion when England and Scotland united, but there are attempts to get the day celebrated more.



George needn't worry though - there other places that claim him as patron saint that celebrate in far better style, most noticable the beautiful city of Barcelona! Barcelona is the capital city of Catalona, a region of Spain that once was a separate kingdom, and I was lucky enough to go there last weekend with my other half for a wonderful birthday treat. I love Barcelona! So full of colour and so vibrant, and never more so on
La Diada de Sant Jordi (Saint George's Day). Also known as El dia de la Rosa (The Day of the Rose) or El dia del Llibre (The Day of the Book) the Catalonians holiday on 23 April in a similar way to St Valentine's Day. Men give women roses and women gave men a book to celebrate the occasion—"a rose for love and a book forever." Red roses have been a symbol of St George since medieval times, but the giving of books is a more recent tradition originating in 1923, when a bookseller started to promote the holiday as a way to commemorate deaths of Miguel Cervantes and William Shakespeare on 23 April 1616.
 

In Barcelona's most visited street, La Rambla, thousands of stands of roses and makeshift bookstalls are set up for the occasion. By the end of the day, some four million roses and 800,000 books will have been purchased. Most women will carry a rose in hand, and half of the total yearly book sales in Catalonia take place on this occasion. The city is always full of music and street performers but even more so on this day.


I thought I'd join in the celebrations by showing off some of our roses, both finished pieces and beads and components for your own creations. Enjoy St George's Day!

Barcelona is also home to lots of bead shops! I have a post on my blog that I wrote after my second visit in 2008 (I told you that I love Barcelona!) that you can see here, and I'm in the process of writing another updated one - it'll will be ready soon!

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Saturday Share...Big Shot, the Sequel!

Back in February, I shared some of my experiences with using the Sizzix Big Shot using their embossing folders.



Several of you commented, asking if the Big Shot could be used  with other materials...brass design plates, found objects, etc.  My curiosity sufficiently aroused, I have since been playing around here and there with using other things besides the suggested embossing folders to create texture on metal with it. So, I thought I would share my findings with you today!

As a standard procedure before running a piece through the Big Shot, I anneal my metal with my torch (I used my Lenk butane, but any torch will do), so they would be as soft as possible.

First up, I wanted to try some design plates I found a while back on the cheap at Michael's.  I bought them to try and hammer the texture into the metal, and put them away...I actually forgot I had them!

I experimented with 3 different textures, to varying degrees of success. At the top of the photos are the plate I used, and the bottom is the outcome.  The plates were 2-sided, opposites...indented on 1 side,  raised on the other.  I used the raise side on all 3 tries.




It worked, but it didn't really give me a clean impression...sort of hazy, whch of course could work, depending on your design.

Next, I decided to try some burlap fabric that I had.  I have hammered fabric and screen wire textures in before to mixed success, so I thought I would give it a go.


Again, not a terribly clean impression, but I sort of like it.

The next pieces used a couple of steel components I just got.  The filigree rectangle actually made one of my favorite textures.  Doesn't really look like the filigree design, but it is a cool texture...sort of like concrete block!  The leaf only gave an outline, but it works!




Tracy over at Cinnamon Jewellery (I absolutely love her work!!) commented that she was etching pieces to use as texture plates, so I decided to try that as well.  I used a piece I etched a couple of weeks ago.  I think it needs to be a deeper etch though.  As you can see, it is pretty, but not very prominent.



Well, there you have it.  In my humble opinion, while these worked to a certain extent, it was pretty hard on the Big Shot.  I had to add more layers to get enough pressure to impress the design and it took more muscle.  I may have warped the top plastic layer of my cutting/embossing pad.  The embossing folders that are designed to work with this machine, since they have 2 sides with an interlocking design, tend to give a more defined impression.  I will probably stick to using a hammer and my bench block with the metal texture plates.

But wait, last minute light bulb...what about using a wire design?  I found a copper wire free-form reject in my scrap bin, and decided to give it a go.



Hmm, this actually worked pretty well.  Bonus, like the embossing folders, you get an inverted design on the other side.  I like them both...this is something I will definitely incorporate!

Well, there you have it!  It is possible to use the Big Shot with design plates and other texturing materials, but make sure to anneal the metal really well,  tape the materials and the metal blank to the machine, so that it doesn't slip around, be mindful to make sure you aren't abusing your machine with too much force, and have fun!

Let me know if you have been experimenting with the Big Shot or something similar since my last post...I would love to hear about your results and opinions!

Melissa Meman
Melismatic Art Jewelry
Art. Life. Love.



Friday, April 19, 2013

Folklore Friday: the lunar hare

A few in my collection
Easter may have come and gone - but rabbits and hares are here for the season. Not a day goes by when I don't see a flash of white fluff tail as it bounds across the back yard - escaping before the dogs are loosed to sniff and roam.

Anyone who knows me  knows I have a personal interest in hares. Not so much the cutesy bunnies, but rabbits and hares. These animals show up in mythologies around the world - from China to Aztec Mexico, Celtic myth, Buddhist lore...  And while I could wax poetic about hares and myth for a while ( Easter/spring/eggs - a whole other post!) I wanted to introduce you to the lunar hare...

Reproduction netsuke. Future pendants. 

The Hare in the Moon is a common thread in folklore from the China, Celtic Britain, Mayan Mexico... which is interesting in and of itself. Where Western folklore teaches us to look for the "Man in the Moon amidst the craters and lunar landscape - in the East its the hare in moon. He is often seen with a mortar and pestle, grinding the ingredients to create the elixir of immortality. He is associated with Chang'O a Chinese moon goddess - concocting the elixir for her... Symbolically the hare represents longevity, fertility and the feminine power if Yin. 

The Mayan goddess Ixchel was the goddess of the moon, childbirth, weaving... Her consort was a hare.   There was a temple to Ixchel in Cozumel Mexico. 

One tale I find the most intriguing - because of its commonality in so may diverse mythos is this: 
Lord Buddha was traveling, incognito, and met a fellow traveller, a hare. The hare, recognizing the Buddha, was ashamed he had no food to offer. He jumped in the stew pot, sacrificing himself, to feed the Buddha. The Buddha in thanks for this offering, placed the hare in the moon for recognition of his gift, and for eternal  safekeeping. Versions of this myth alternately place the Hindu god Indra and the Aztec god Quetzalcoatl in the tale. The common threads of an archetype - across cultures - is so inspiring to me!

Thanks to Terri Windling for her article "Symbolism of Rabbits and Hares" for bringing so many threads of inspiration together. Its a great article if you are interested in reading more. Here are a few images and aTreasury for your viewing pleasure and inspiration. 
An Etsy Treasury of hares in many mediums. 

My lunar hare mixing with raven and hare totem pendants. 

My mixed media piece: copper, enamel, faux bone, gems.


Thanks for tuning in to Folklore Friday! Until next time... 
Jenny

ww.jdaviesreazor.com