Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Trunk Show at the Calico Cat

I'm busy getting ready for my trunk show at the Calico Cat.  The Calico Cat is a fantastic  store in the Uptown Forum in downtown Greenville.  I love the Flax clothing line that they carry, and the Baggalini bags and purses.  

Here's the write up from one of their newsletters.  Thanks!



Leslie Todd Jewelry Trunk Show on Thursday & Friday, September 17 & 18.
Leslie Todd JewelryLocal artist Leslie Todd works with semi-precious gemstones, pearls, coral, shell, glass and other materials, adding sterling silver, copper, brass and gold-filled touches.  Find just the right piece to finish an outfit or build a look around one of her necklaces, bracelets or earring sets.  Either way, you won't want to miss this beautiful jewelry!

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

M and L Studios


M and L Studios (Martha and Me) is the new name of our Canton Booth/store. Going south from I20, it's in the Canton Marketplace building on highway 19 before you get to the old section. If I can figure out how to put a map up I'll do that.

We also have a blog here.

We're in booth C122. We are offering 10% off to all customers who mention reading about it in a blog. This offer is good during the October 1st Monday Trade Days in Canton TX, October 2-4, 2009.

There are literally thousands of vendors at Canton Trade Days so come on out. Our building is the only one with heat and AC, and we are open from 8 am until 8 pm. The rest of the vendors close at 5 pm. Check it out.

Learning New Techniques-- Hammered Copper Bangles

I purchased several gauges of copper electrical wire at hardware stores and I just made my first cuffs and bangles using the wire. I used an article by Kim St. Jean in summer preview 2009 issue of Step by Step Wire Jewelry for instructions (Bodacious Copper Bangles).

I used 8, 6, and 4 gauge wires.

I cut the wires into various lengths for cuffs and bangles. The bangles are all extra large size. This is so I'll be able to wear them. I very rarely find a commercial bangle big enough to go over my hand.

The next step was annealing the copper. I had never done this before. I was worried about dropping the hot wire on my foot when I quenched it so I dug my Doc Martens out of the closet. Probably I should have worn pants too, but it was about a 100 degrees outside. I did have eye protection and gloves.

annealing copper wire

I enlisted my teen-aged son, Stefan, to take pictures. The sun was so bright that Ralph had to hold a piece of cardboard up to shade the work so I could see the orange glow. I used a fire brick that Ralph made a while back, after he figured out how much the shipping was on the bricks. Ralph kept saying things like, "I hope my brick doesn't explode." The brick was dry as a bone so I can't see why he thought it might explode.

annealing copper wire

I torched the first wire until it had a nice orange glow, let it cool until the orange faded, then used pliers to pick it up and drop it into a pot of water. Ralph scared me by immediately reaching in to the water with a bare hand and pulling out the wire. I didn't realize that the copper cooled so quickly.

quenching

The wire went into the water completely black, but as it cooled bits of the oxidation flaked off revealing pinkish red areas. The top wires have been quenched. The bottom ones are before annealing.

before & after annealing

Stefan and I both picked up one of the annealed wires and accidentally bent it. That's how soft it got. I had no idea the change was that great.

After annealing I hammered the wires flat on top and bottom with a planishing hammer and then used various texturing hammers to add interest to the bracelets. The ends of the wires were pounded flat into paddle shapes. The 8 gauge wire was formed into a serpentine shape before hammering. The serpentine shape was something I wanted to try. It isn't in the article. I had to anneal one of the thicker wires a second time to finish texturing it.

copper wire after hammering

hammering

The bracelets were then annealed again. After this I shaped them using an oval mandrel for the cuffs and a round mandrel for the bangles. I also used a file to clean up the ends a little and round off the paddle shapes. I was going for rustic rather than "fine".

After shaping I put them in a pickle made of vinegar and salt, rinsed, and brushed them with a brass brush.


I used some silver wire for a rivet on the bangles. This was the first time I had done rivets. I did not ball the end of the wire as the article instructed, mostly because I was tired of cleaning the scale off. I don't have a draw plate either, so I used pliers and a regular anvil. I just hammered around the end until I mushroomed it. I lashed one of the cuffs with silver wire. This was a real pain. I had trouble tucking the ends under. I then antiqued three of the bracelets using liver of sulfur. I really liked the way they looked after that. I put several coats of Renaissance Wax on the antiqued ones.

bangles and cuffs

I still have one more rivet to set. I'm going to put Art Clay on two of the remaining bracelets.



three bracelets after antiquing