Will be back this fall! Looking forward to playing with Hot Glass again!
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Friday, January 22, 2010
Knit 1, Purl 2...
Wow, where has all the time gone! It feels like ages since I worked on beading projects! I have really had a rough year of little activity in this area... but I have found other outlets! The studio disaster didn't help my lack of motivation either... now working on getting some heat into the studio and clearing it out, but even that isn't thrilling me the way it should.
To quench my creative desires I have turned to that old favorite of mine... knitting!
For the Giftmas holidays I made washcloths and scarves! The scarves were fun but the washclothes were a hoot! I found online at Ravelry.com and on a couple of blogs DOCTOR WHO themed washcloth designs! I made a Dalek, Cyberman, and TARDIS cloth for my best friend RMF, TARDIS cloths for my boys, and a Star Trek logo cloth for my oldest who is really more into that show ... But, stupid forgot to take pictures of them!

Here's one I borrowed online -
Since these cloths are way too cool to only make once I picked up some yarn in the appropriate colors to make more. I am also thinking about a blanket done in squares in a Doctor Who, Star Trek, or Star Wars theme... that is still in the planning stages!
I have been inspired by the website Ravelry.com and joined a few groups there. The summer of 2008 I met a lady in Marquette who was knitting socks on two circular needles, she was the clerk
at Snowbound Books, and took the time to show me how the process worked by knitting a couple of rounds for me! I eventually bought Knitting Circles Around Socks by Antje Gillingham and read the patterns. This January I joined a sock knit-a-long - 2010 Pair a Month KAL & CAL. Last night I finished my first pair - Camouflage Red Heart worsted yarn! Well, they are thick and warm. These will great slipper-socks or boot socks, but are too thick to wear in shoes.
I have the yarn for next pair and am really looking forward to making socks that I can wear everyday - the next pair will be knit on size 2 needles and will probably take three time longer, a least!
Other projects are in the works....
Friday, October 2, 2009
This is a cross-over post from my other blog...Hot Coffee and Musings - Check out the photos on that blog!
For the last couple of years my studio has been plagued with leaks. One problem spot was in a built-in shelf unit that stuck out from the rest of the addition. This was covered with a flat roof that butted up against a wraparound porch and the roof of the main portion of the house. My darling husband has kept this patched, and most of the time under control. That ended this winter.
The shelf unit became very mouldy and mildewy. I could no longer work in there and resorted to storing a lot of my beads in other parts of the house. Not an easy thing to do and no one was happy with me!
Last Spring, right around tax time and toward the end of my final forensics season (another sad story), the leak got worse. My darling husband looked into re-roofing that portion of the house, but there were other leaks, too. We finally decided that the whole thing needed to be done.
This became one of those home repair nightmares where everything keeps getting worse.
Tear off, which should have taken a day or two took a couple of weeks. There were four roofs up there... four! Deck-shingles-shingles-deck-shingles-shingles.... A new deck had been placed over an existing and rotting deck. In places, the roof was rotting from the first deck out. The valley where a phony roof line was created had been tarred through to the first deck beneath the final layer of shingles... this was a mess that has consumed most of our summer.
We now have a new metal roof. The roof line has been extended over the entire length of the house taking in my studio. I now have a covered porch. No more shoveling snow from my oxygen tanks in the winter.
The roof over my studio spans the entire width of the house. My studio, which is only half the width of the house, will connect to an addition...but that is a project for another day.
So, I am remodeling some. I lost my office at the college and have decided not to pursue another coaching position. I have a new (old bookshelf) for my communication texts and am sorting through the years of office supplies I have accumulated. I'm a couple of behind schedule as far as getting my act to together with the jewelry and beads... but I have a new dry roof over my head and more time than I know what to do with... Time to get to work
For the last couple of years my studio has been plagued with leaks. One problem spot was in a built-in shelf unit that stuck out from the rest of the addition. This was covered with a flat roof that butted up against a wraparound porch and the roof of the main portion of the house. My darling husband has kept this patched, and most of the time under control. That ended this winter.
The shelf unit became very mouldy and mildewy. I could no longer work in there and resorted to storing a lot of my beads in other parts of the house. Not an easy thing to do and no one was happy with me!
Last Spring, right around tax time and toward the end of my final forensics season (another sad story), the leak got worse. My darling husband looked into re-roofing that portion of the house, but there were other leaks, too. We finally decided that the whole thing needed to be done.
This became one of those home repair nightmares where everything keeps getting worse.
Tear off, which should have taken a day or two took a couple of weeks. There were four roofs up there... four! Deck-shingles-shingles-deck-shingles-shingles.... A new deck had been placed over an existing and rotting deck. In places, the roof was rotting from the first deck out. The valley where a phony roof line was created had been tarred through to the first deck beneath the final layer of shingles... this was a mess that has consumed most of our summer.
We now have a new metal roof. The roof line has been extended over the entire length of the house taking in my studio. I now have a covered porch. No more shoveling snow from my oxygen tanks in the winter.
The roof over my studio spans the entire width of the house. My studio, which is only half the width of the house, will connect to an addition...but that is a project for another day.
So, I am remodeling some. I lost my office at the college and have decided not to pursue another coaching position. I have a new (old bookshelf) for my communication texts and am sorting through the years of office supplies I have accumulated. I'm a couple of behind schedule as far as getting my act to together with the jewelry and beads... but I have a new dry roof over my head and more time than I know what to do with... Time to get to work
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Where have you been?
Coming soon a detailed explaination of what I have been up to. A dark tale of roofs, job interviews, college students coming home, and other adventures... Tune in for more information...Same Bat-time, same Bat-channel!
Look for pictures and Etsy.com updates as soon as I can set up my studio again...another dark tale.
Look for pictures and Etsy.com updates as soon as I can set up my studio again...another dark tale.
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Summer Resolution
The spring semester ended last week...grade are in...JAFAX is past... I should be up to my eyebrows in beads in Michigamme at this very moment but the best laid plans have gone awry.
I have had a tough time getting things together for posting the past few months. My studio has suffered some water damage, I had a terrible winter schedule despite only teaching two classes, and then spring hit and I had to move out of my office at work. Woe is me. I still don't have my photo booth set up so I'm taking pictures on my desk! Lovely!
Time for some bead therapy!
The little free-form bracelet will be finished with a clasp. It is very narrow and I love the twist in the middle. It lays wonderfully on the wrist, but alas, is very small! Too small for me.
Olive oil and wine bottles are a rich olive green, but my favorite are the brown beer bottle beads. It is a rich clear brown that I have not found in rod glass. I have a whole case of Leinenkugel to play with once emptied.
I also made some in blue and clear. The clear I have decided to etch for a frosted look and will treat as "white."
I also made some in blue and clear. The clear I have decided to etch for a frosted look and will treat as "white."
I am trying to decide on how to attach the clasps. I have plans to make some clasps from copper wire and tie the ends to form a loop to attach the clasps to. I also brought some copper ends for a more formal look. I may even wire-wrap the ends with thin copper wire. So far, I've tried all three and am not completely thrilled by any of the final products.

The copper jewelry has been coming along fine! I spent a couple of weekends earlier this spring sorting through my lampwork beads and putting together sets for earrings. The copper is some heavy duty wire that I got from my husband after an electrical project. I flattened the wire with a hammer, shaping paddles at each end. The beads float on the center of the paddle. I finished the earrings with copper ear hooks. These are waiting for the photo booth!
Let me close with a brag... I sold my first bracelet on Etsy.com. My white RAW bracelet was purchased for a wedding. I am so excited! I have never had a "stranger" buy one of my pieces before and look forward to many more...It feels good!
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Etsy: Updating my store
I have ignored my Etsy store for many, many months and decided that I either had to 1) Do something with it ... post items for sale; or 2) Let it go. I lurk around Etsy a lot and see a lot of artisans who do very well, at least they have a lot of sales. So, I decided to give it try... again.
Beading Daily doesn't highly recommend sites like Etsy because they believe that a lot of the viewers are other artists and crafters. That may be true. I find that most of the people who ask about a necklace that I'm wearing or a project that I'm working on are fellow crafters. We appreciate the work that goes into making a handcrafted item. But fellow crafters can't be the only people who visit Etsy.
I realize a lot of the reasons I have so much inventory is that I get bashful about promoting my work. I know my friends who read this will find that weird, but it is true. You put yourself out to show off your items and face critique and criticism. Now some of this is valuable. I appreciate it when one of the gals at the local bead store, Bead Culture (www.beadculture.com), comment on my work and offer a suggestion. It's another thing when someone suggests that they can buy something just like that at Target.
What's been posted... to the side of the blog I have added a quick preview to my Etsy. There are four bracelets in the shop right now. When my order from Fire Mountain Gems and Beads (www.firemountaingems.com) arrives I will have some of my new bottleneck bead necklaces to post. I'm really looking forward to working on those.
So, as we come to the middle of the third month of the year... I am slowly fulfilling my promise to myself for the new year. Now... I just have to figure out what to do with the website... but that is for another day. I have a bracelet waiting for me to finish.
Beading Daily doesn't highly recommend sites like Etsy because they believe that a lot of the viewers are other artists and crafters. That may be true. I find that most of the people who ask about a necklace that I'm wearing or a project that I'm working on are fellow crafters. We appreciate the work that goes into making a handcrafted item. But fellow crafters can't be the only people who visit Etsy.
I realize a lot of the reasons I have so much inventory is that I get bashful about promoting my work. I know my friends who read this will find that weird, but it is true. You put yourself out to show off your items and face critique and criticism. Now some of this is valuable. I appreciate it when one of the gals at the local bead store, Bead Culture (www.beadculture.com), comment on my work and offer a suggestion. It's another thing when someone suggests that they can buy something just like that at Target.
What's been posted... to the side of the blog I have added a quick preview to my Etsy. There are four bracelets in the shop right now. When my order from Fire Mountain Gems and Beads (www.firemountaingems.com) arrives I will have some of my new bottleneck bead necklaces to post. I'm really looking forward to working on those.
So, as we come to the middle of the third month of the year... I am slowly fulfilling my promise to myself for the new year. Now... I just have to figure out what to do with the website... but that is for another day. I have a bracelet waiting for me to finish.
Friday, February 6, 2009
From the kiln...
February has been cold, that deep dry cold that we get in Michigan. Chapped skin, cold feet, and a chilly studio. Actually, my studio has been too cold to bare on most days. Even the space heater can't keep up. In the last couple of weeks the temperature has been high enough to torch once.
I still have some cleaning to do. I will shape with the grinder and take off any bead release that was hiding in the hole. The purple one in the bottom corner cracked in the kiln. I have plans for the pair!
This is one of the better shaped cabs to come directly from the kiln. This bead was made of Bullseye glass and pressed in a lentil mold. It was misshaped and had a small fracture. Now it is a beautiful cab...almost ready for use.
This one has an interesting crack. I really don't know enough about glass at this point to diagnose, but I think I may have mixed glass. There might be some Bullseye glass mixed with Morretti. I made this bead quite a while ago and at that time was experimenting with using Bullyseye glass in the torch. No matter... it will make a nice fish tank decoration.
Just to have the chance to play with glass I put some "bad beads" in the kiln to slump. Wonky beads make great cabs. I'm pleased with the raw results.
This bead cracked around the hole taking it off the mandrel. I'm thinking about cutting the smaller end off and rounding it for a circular cab that will have the darker swirl at one end and the ivory at the other.
Last Sunday, when it was actually warm enough to torch I made a couple of hearts and some smaller beads that I plan to use in a bracelet. Everything needs to be cleaned, and I have time for that today since it is too cold to work back in the studio much longer. As much as I love winter, I am really looking forward to warmer temperatures.
Labels:
cabochons,
fusing,
lampwork,
wonky beads
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