Showing posts with label hand made bead tutorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hand made bead tutorial. Show all posts

Friday, 1 August 2014

Strawberries and Cream - a Summer Project

Strawberries and Cream - a summer project


As part of a summer challenge for a Facebook jewellery making group I decided to create a fully loaded bracelet and charm pendant representing summer strawberries.
I have two lovely strawberry moulds and numerous leaf moulds which work well and I wanted to create hand made dipped beads in a clotted cream colour.
a home made mould

this is a Martha Stewart mould


To create the berry colour I used  Diamond Clear with two reds - Cosmic Shimmer's Berry Red and Crafty Notions Ruby Red




because it was quite time consuming to create a batch of charms I needed to keep turning down the heat to stop the mix going too orange
the small mould poured 

finished small berries
    I also poured the large strawberry



the finished strawberries
Next I created the leaves using Crafty Notions Peridot and Diamond Clear
Martha Stewart moulds
completed leaves


To make the beads I colour mixed a clotted cream colour using Diamond Clear with a small amount of Ranger's UTEE white and a sprinkle of Cosmic Shimmer's Light Gold


colour mix for beads

I played around with this until I got a slightly lighter colour than I needed - knowing it would darken with the heat


To make hand dipped beads you need a head or eye pin and then dip the finding in repeatedly, building up layers. You need to gently rotate the pin to make a round shape although the slightly imperfect ones have an organic feel. To make sure the colour is consistent I dipped each pin in turn with each layer building rather than making  a complete bead each time. 


just dipping the end of the eye pin into the mix



swirling gently to get a good shape


third dip


all lined up ready for the final dip

completed beads



the completed bracelet elements
the finished pendant elements

Finally I assembled the charm bracelet and created the charm pendant 

a close up of the bracelet





I think this has a real feel of those long summer days!


Wednesday, 22 January 2014

Charm Bracelet with hand made beads tutorial

I bought some lovely little bee charms and decided to make a simple charm bracelet with bumble bee coloured beads.
I mixed a golden colour using citrine, bright orange and clear. I also added some Flex to give extra strength and reduce brittleness.








I also used a jet black but added some clear and flex to give more depth to the bead.    When I am using black I use a project pan because cleaning out the melt pot is quite hard with black - even the slightest speck can change the colour of the next pour. So this way I keep the black separate.

any left over I let cool and keep in the pan










The method I use for these hand made beads is often called the Leandra bead - it is created by repeated dipping of a headpin to create a ball.  You can actually make lovely contrasting or matching headpins for a project by just dipping once.



You need the mix to be slightly thicker than normal so once the enamel is melted I turn the heat down just a little bit. I also use the lid to tilt the melt pot slightly so that I have a deeper pool to dip into.



I tend to dip all the headpins once and then go back to the beginning by which time they have cooled enough.



this ended up a strange shape because I didn't turn evenly
It is important to keep the pin moving after you've dipped to get a good round shape. A gentle turn works well - too fast and it all flies off the pin, too slow and it makes an odd shaped blob.
It only takes a few seconds for the enamel to become hard enough not to move.





I used the charms as a guide for how big I wanted the beads.

It is quite hard to make them all the same size and of course they don't always end up round but that is part of the uniqueness of the bead.






Once the beads are finished you can heat polish them if they need it - this also can be used to even up any odd shapes but you will need to develop a swirling technique to do this otherwise the enamel will just melt and blob off.


I also used simple ball studs with the loop cut off and dipped them into the mix to make matching stud earrings

Once they were all finished I cut off the excess headpin and made rolled loops. then I added the beads and charms to a simple chain with a clasp.