Friday, January 28, 2011

Challenges for 2011

Challenges - we have 2!

Butterfly Pin Challenge - due in March 2011

Carol Harder has challenged members to use an enameled butterfly pin (her gift to each member as a thank - you for making her charm bracelet ,) She has a variety of butterflies to select from. The challenge: use the butterfly pin in a piece of jewelry or something.....She attached one to a beaded flower ring, above. If you missed the meeting you can stop by Harder Performance to get a butterfly or pick one up at the February meeting (Feb. 15, 2011)


KC Fountains Challenge - due in May 2011 Be inspired by one of the many Kansas City fountains to create something! Must include some PMC or other metal clay.

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Making Custom Headpins and more

The KC PMC Guild Chapter's January meeting was filled with new ideas and Jule's headpin demo.

What's new?   Verrey Glass© Fusing (Cold Cast Pate-de-Verre)

Margaret Braet (long-time member of our guild chapter and local Kansas City artist) has been developing her own product - called Verrey Glass© - and she's now teaching classes and selling her product. The next local class is at the end of January 2011 - at Heartland Bead Marketing in Lenexa.


What's new about this? Traditonal pate-de-verre is a class casting technique layering glass (frit in a suspension medium) in a plaster mold for firing. (photo of a fabulous beaded collar by member, Betty Chaison, with a cast glass serpent in the center which she brought to show at the meeting.)



This requires working blind and backwards if using colors and leaves a plaster film which must be removed. Margaret's technique permit reusing molds (even like silicone texture stamps) and much more control of color placement. Go, Margaret! She's promised to demo this for us later this year.

Headpin Demo 

 
Using 20ga fine silver wire and a variety of small shapes (flowers, disks and balls) Jule's created various headpins, suitable making so-simple earrings or using with beads or any way you might use a headpin. She also demonstrated how to ball the ends of the wire with a torch and to ball up scraps of wire or bits of PMC scrap. This also works with Sterling silver, but the balls turn black and need to be pickled.

Tip 1: to make uniform balls of silver (for setting onto a PMC piece or soldering to a fabricated piece)
  1. wind the wire around a mandrel as for making jump rings, choosing the mandrel size to control the amount of wire per piece
  2. cut the coil as for jump rings, the resulting rings will have a equal length of wire
  3. using a small torch on a charcoal block, ball (heat with torch until it melts) up the pieces 
View a Cool Tools video on Youtube.com here.

Tip 2: hold the wire straight into the flame - a tilted wire results in an off center ball or one that melts and drops off.
Tip 3: torches vary! The hotter the torch, the faster the wire melts, so know your equipment.
 
BE SAFE: Always work over a flame-protected area, wear eye protection and cotton clothing...

    Friday, January 14, 2011

    Follow Us!

    Want to be reminded about
    • KC PMC Guild Events
    • Blog posts
    • Information re local metal clay classes
    Want to connect with or find others in the Kansas City metropolitan area that share your interest in precious metal clays (and related activities)?

    Here's how:
    Check out our website at www.kcpmcguild.org - where we post
    • regular (mostly) updates about meeting topics, locations, what to bring to demos, etc.
    • driving directions to our meeting location 
    • pics of cools stuff people bring to meetings
    • links to local classes and PMC teachers
    • links to national PMC info
    • links to members' websites (IF they have given us the information...)
    Read our semi-regular blog posts at www.kcpmcguild.blogspot.com . You can also click to
    FOLLOW the blog (to receive an email notice when we post something new) or
    SUBSCRIBE to posts (does the same thing, basically)
    This eliminates the need to go check the blog unless there is new information there. We promise not to be pesky - we usually add posts before and after our monthly meetings, not every day.

    On Facebook, look for PMC Guild International and like it. They post news and info about what's happening in the PMC world, such as this recent link to a cool PMC firing chart.

    You can also help - if you are a shop selling PMC or jewelry supplies and /or offer classes in PMC (or other metal clays) we'd like to add you to our reference list. Please contact us. Note: you will need to edit the email address from "at" to "@" for the email to send.

    We are NOT using our old Yahoo Groups to communicate and will be removing that link from our site.

    January 18, 2011 Meeting Demo Info

     Jules Van Hoecke will demo how to make silver balls for decorating your PMC pieces and how to do the same with scrap PMC (fired). AND, we'll make decorative head pins with silver wire and clay. Sounds like an interesting evening!






     Bring your own wire (20 ga FINE silver), clay and tools. Torch optional. Wire and PMC will be available to purchase at the meeting. We hope to use the on-site kiln to fire finished headpins.

    Tools and Supplies needed to make your own decorative head pins

        * torch ( + firing equipment i.e. charcoal block, protective surface, etc)
        * 20 ga fine silver wire (we have some if you want to buy)
        * clay
        * wire cutters
        * tools needed to work with clay
        * scraps silver (fired pmc) or silver wire ( for making decorative balls)

    If you have ever accidentally melted your silver with a torch, you know how frustrating that can be. However, you can also learn to intentionally melt silver into perfect little balls of metal - it's nearly as fun as hammering or kneading bread - a little destructive aggression can be channeled into something useful!

    Jules will bring tools but bring your own set up if you really want to make some headpins during the meeting. We'll try to fire up Carol's kiln and fire what we make.

    Note: Fine silver wire must be used for making headpins with PMC heads. Sterling wire may be used to make simple balled wire headpins. 20 or 22 ga is best.

    Meeting starts at 7 pm.
     Don't forget our first CHALLENGE - due in May 2011.