Posts filed under 'Wire'
Nos. 18, 19, 20 And Summer Is Here
Here they are, some light summery party pairs resting on Coney Island shells.

This pair is my first attempt at using a jig. I got mine at wigjig. Wigjig also features lengthy tutorials on working with wire, including one on how to form the swirly elements. They were originally intended to be bracelet components.

This pair involved some free twirling. I wanted to suspend the bead in the middle of the oval hoop and ended up using a jump ring to hang up the bead.
And last, but not least, some hoops strung with stone chips and seed beads. They strike me as kind of tribal something one of the Flintstone girls might wear.
3 comments June 24, 2008
No. 15 Wacky Wires

Can you tell that I’m trying to get away from the green thing? These are glass and resin beads on bits of wire twisted this way and that. By the way, the great thing about having kids is that you have wonderful props for these pictures. Although, this clock is actually mine; an “antique” from the 70’s.
2 comments May 27, 2008
No. 11 Squiggles
Some more wire. This time with earring stoppers. To get this kind of spiral you take a length of wire and fold it in half. Bend over the folded tip and start wrapping the wire around it shaping a spiral. When you have about an inch left, separate the doubled up wires and make loops at opposite ends of the spiral. Here, I used a 6 inch length of wire that rendered a .5 inch spiral. By the way, do you like the double jump rings?
1 comment April 22, 2008
No. 10 One is the loneliest number. . .

For a brief moment in time and space there were two of us, but now after 72 hours I am alone. Why didn’t she secure us with some earring stoppers. Now I have to hang on this oversized martini glass surveying peoplekind without a mate. Great sadness.
As you can tell I’m in a wiry mood. I guess it makes sense. Once you learn how to string a bead you want to graduate to the lofty heights of wire work. It’s April and here is Number 10. Only 89 to go. Yikes!
3 comments April 16, 2008
No. 9 Copper Beauties

2 comments March 20, 2008
No. 7 More Blue Drops

Here is a variation on the blue glass drops. I like the little twirl at the end of a wrap. I noticed it on a bracelet I saw in Manhattan and all of the sudden I see it everywhere.
Isn’t it odd how until something is of interest to you, you don’t really notice it? For example, it wasn’t until I was pregnant that I suddenly noticed all these pregnant women and strollers. The angel has been on my bathroom wall for a while. I took it down to dust it for the “photo shoot” and discovered that it was a Fontanini angel from 1967, which of course didn’t mean anything to me until I googled it. My grandmother gave it to me a while ago and I’m sure she knows all about these things without the almighty Google engine.
5 comments February 27, 2008
No. 5 Industrial Spring

2 comments February 14, 2008
No. 4, or how to freak out your fish. . .

1 comment January 30, 2008
No. 2
Clasp Earrings

The centerpiece of these earrings are the two halves of a clasp. Just wear the clasps or pretty them up further with something dangley.
Add comment January 11, 2008
Earring Pair No. 1
Here is my project for the year: I want to make 99 different pairs of earrings over the course of the next 12 months. That averages about 2 pairs a week. We’ll see how I fare with this resolution. This is the first pair of the year:
For Christmas my husband gave me a bunch of tools and a bag of potato beads. While browsing for a new technique to try out, I stumbled upon the idea of a wire cage. To make these pretties you need:
- Two 4 inch pieces of wire (22 gauge) for the cage
- Two 3 inch pieces of wire for the wrapped loops
- 2 beads you want to envelop in the cage
- 2 4mm crystal beads to dangle off the loop
- earring wire
- bits of fine chain
- 2 small split rings
To put them together:
The Cage
- Make a small loop at the end of one 4 inch wire and then begin spiraling about 2 inches of the wire. Repeat from the other end.
- Keep spiraling the two coils until they overlap and then pull the center of each spiral out to form the top.
- Insert the bead in the cage and tweak the wire around it until you arrive at a shape to your liking.
The Loop
- Begin creating a wrapped loop, but thread a crystal on the wire before you wrap the loop.
- Move the bead around in the cage until the hole aligns with the top of the bead. Then thread the straight end of the wrapped loop through the top of the cage, the bead and the bottom of the cage.
- Begin creating another wrapped loop at the other end of the wire, but thread the end of the chain onto the wire before wrapping it.
The Finale
- Attach the other end of the chain to a split ring.
- Attach the split ring to the earring wire
- Repeat the whole process with the other earring.
1 comment January 7, 2008




