Super Savvy…

I’m super excited, I learned how to do something new.  This time on the admin end.

I am at present my own webmaster, so I have to learn a lot of things I know nothing about, but with enough failed attempts, something might finally sink in.  Or I completely shut down mentally…

I have been failing at setting up emails from my website to work with my Mac mail service, but I’m sure I’ll figure that out soon enough.  So, you know how when you’re looking everywhere for info on how to do ONE thing, you inevitably stumble upon something else?  That’s how it all went down.

In the end you may not be as excited as me, but I have added a “Tulaa Blog” tab to my website, and when you click on that it will automatically redirect you here to my blog!  Like I said probably bigger news for me than you but what can I say, I spend a lot of time alone.

Thanks for listening, and as a treat here’s something new not on website yet, but will be very soon…

handmade carnelian honey calcite and chrysoprase necklace

handmade facted ruby and garnet om necklace

Love ya’s!

First casting finished!

I was messing around with getting my Flickr account set up because it is apparently a “must do” in the artists’ world.  I agree, it is a fun place to share and see.  I had fun listing my pics in a new way, just for fun.  Anyway, I uploaded, tagged, published, AND linked it to my blog.  Well, it was then that I noticed that I had not updated here about my druzy piece!

It took some time, and a lot of guidance from RJ (my mentor, and master jeweler Robin Jordan), but here she is…

smithsonite druzy pendant in sterling silver

It was really challenging to fabricate the prongs for this piece.  Being my first, I was unaware of what really went into prong placement.  We had to be very careful because of the crystal structure of the druzy.

smithsonite druzy pendant in sterling silver

You can see how we had to direct the prongs around certain areas.  I was a bit intimidated by the process, but was heartened when RJ said  “I may have lead you down the wrong path, we have picked probably the most difficult typ of stone to set for your first time out!”  He explained that in the future, with practice, things get easier, especially if I am working with a more uniform surface.  Oh well, I always am making things way more difficult for myself!

Here is a back view where you can see how cool this stone is from all angles

smithsonite druzy pendant set in silver

I have since finished another druzy piece, and I am going back for more. Next time it’s a labradorite cab with a lot of fire…this is what we call a teaser!  Until next time!

Happy Valentine’s Day…meet my new love

I am so excited, I just had to share.  Last year when I went to Tucson for the annual Gem and Mineral show, I fell in love with druzy!  What is that you ask?  Take a look

druzy smithsonite and druzy quartz

These beauties are quartz (on left) and smithsonite.  Druzy has become very hot lately due in large part to its “organic” rough look.  Not long ago when a lapidary was cutting away on some rough and came across a pocket of crystals like this, they might have tossed it aside into a “flawed” category, because it was not seen as stable material for shaping into finished pieces.  Thank goodness times have changed!

So I returned from Tucson with a new bag of rocks, and a yet unknown problem…

I had no idea that I could not set these stones with my current skill set…

So there they sat for almost a year.  I had a busy year unrelated to jewelry, so my stones lay quietly waiting in my home studio. They had spent thousands of years waiting to be unearthed, what was one more year of waiting to see what would happen to them?

Last week I took them with me again to see my teacher and mentor, Robin Jordan.  We looked at how we could set them based on my fabricating knowledge, and quite frankly, it was going to be a job.  I won’t bore you with technicalities (assuming you’re not bored already), but I’ll be honest: I love learning new skills, but this didn’t excite me beyond the fact that I would be able to see these lovelies worn around someone’s neck.

But then, Robin looked at me over the rim of his glasses and said;

“Or we could doing something really wild”

Well, who wouldn’t have their curiosity piqued by that statement?

And so, I finally started to learn about the wonderful new world of wax casting!

Again, I won’t bore you with the technical process, but here is a glimpse at my first three silver casting pieces, still in progress

sterling silver organic casting

fiery labradorite cab waitng for sterling silver setting

silver castings soon to hold smithsonite and quartz druzy

So now I am even more excited than I thought I could be about fabricating jewelry.  The rules of the game have changed, the sky is the limit with possibilities, and I am rejuvenated!