Skip to main content

1st day, new time schedule

Fairly successful.

Went up to continue with a piece at 9:30 and worked solid for an hour, then broke for a yogurt and checked email, etc. Back up and worked for another hour and checked again briefly. Lunch at 1:00 and another brief check. Called it quits when the piece was done and coincidentally it was 5:00.

As far as time management goes, it was good, but the bracelet I made doesn't work for me. I'll probably take it apart and use the elements separately so my whole day won't be wasted, but on its own it is a failure. Oh well. It's part of the process.

Today is for doing errands, lunching with a friend and maybe I'll start another piece. Have some ideas floating around that involve turquoise and lapis.

Anyway...be wise with your time today, peeps, and don't forget to enjoy what you do!

Comments

  1. Don't you hate spending all day on something and have to end up tearing it apart; but, like you said, it is part of the process.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Yeah, it's kind of a bummer, but it's the only way to learn, perfect and find out if things really are cohesive. Sometimes the way in envision things just doens't jibe with reality. I can save the elements though, for another day. The thing I'm working on now is going to be amazing I think.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Jewelry Making Tools

Part of the mystique of jewelry manufacture is the tools. I admit it, I love new tools. I love good tools. Finely worked tools that have special and often obscure purpose. Sometimes I just go through catalogs looking at stuff and wonder what the hell a person does with such a gadget. I remember spending a lot of time as a little girl at my dad's workbench, messing with his tools (lord help me if I misplaced any). A while back while on a visit to my folks' house I spied dad's coping saw (frame saw/jeweler's saw) in his workshop and told him I coveted it. He laughed and said I could buy one for about $10 at Lowes. He's right of course, but that old one looked sweet. My own tool collection is modest and consists largely of the inexpensive variety. Until this craft starts to pay off, I can't justify the expense when money is put to better use buying materials (Christmas is coming and you never know what Santa will bring – Lindstrom, hint hint). But every ...

A new frontier

I have been ignoring this blog. Yup. Bad blogger. So sue me. I've recently upped my jewelry game to the space I've always wanted to play in - I have progressed beyond wire - to sheet metal and other stuff. Real metal work and soldering.  It's what I've always wanted to do, but haven't. I'll keep the reasons why to myself because it doesn't matter. I'm equipped and practicing and soon I can produce something that I hope won't be awful. So what did I buy to round out my kit? Here we go. Stating with the lower left corner and going clockwise we have - Bezel wire (three sizes) Citric acid pickle Third hand Pickle pot (tiny crock pot) Copper tongs (not required for C.A. pickle, but that's ok) 3M polishing pads Tripod Copper sheets Saw blades Cuprinol anti-firescale spray Handy flux Flux picks Sheet solder and cannisters More brass and nickel silver sheets Burnisher (for bezel setting), gorgeous #4 file, and twe...

Signature Style

Most jewelry artists are known for a specific look. Think David Yurman and you know there will be twisted sterling silver involved in every piece. Bankable and something customers come to depend on. But what about an artist just starting out? Should you stick to a particular look or design or should you branch out and have a wider field of possibilities? This is something I'm working through myself. In the early 2000s when I first started making jewelry, I followed the herd. Doing the easy stuff - the stuff I saw on other shop sites and at craft fairs. The problem is, I don't want to be known for stuff you can get at craft fairs. I don't buy or wear that kind of jewelry and making it doesn't appeal to me. So. I need to define my style and therefore my customer. In doing so, that means I can jettison some of the fussy/cutesy stuff that used to be in my line at first. Also, I can identify a particular type of jewelry that will help bolster that style to the cu...