Tag: glass

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Day 27 - So close to the finish!

I can’t believe I haven’t totally skipped a day. Granted, I don’t like using cooking as my ‘thing’ since I have to cook no matter what, but sometimes it’s just a little more/extra/different than normal so in my head, that rationalizes it a tad.

Today’s Thing is for my son’s school fund raiser. They have an ice cream social where you go, eat ice cream (woohoo!), listen to the kidlets sing some songs and bid on baskets put together by all the different classes. His class (1st grade) is making a few small baskets so you can bid with a 1 dollar ticket instead of a 5 dollar ticket. These will be part of a small basket. Hopefully they’ll rake in a couple of bucks :) I’m including a candle as well, maybe a bookmark (I just remembered the mom asked if I could make a matching bookmark…eeek!). Any ideas for a name? Crappy photo, too dark outside for the clothesline :(

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Day 25 - I almost missed today

Too tired to care. BUT apparently TAD is addictive b/c I just could not totally let go. So I sat down and made this bracelet. Not exactly what I wanted, but it was a bit off the beaten path for me. I fell in love with the rectangle links and have been waiting to use them, just not sure this is the use they were meant for. However, I can buy more in the future. If I remember.

I wanted a somewhat random look w/the beads, but sort of screwed that up when I wasn’t paying attention to what I was doing. Since they links were wire wrapped, I couldn’t just take them apart without ruining the entire link so I just left it. I suppose some patterns occur in natural randomness, don’t they? Two similar beads side by side aren’t really a big problem in the grand plan of life. I’ll take that any day if it means The Baby will sleep through the night. And not tease me with a good nap here and there.

So here is my fatigue pattern. Enjoy :)  Sorry for the poor photo.

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i even impressed myself!

feb-23-019.jpgA little white star lantern, embellished with buttons and ribbon and a battery operated candle.  This is my sample - I’m going to sell this craft as a KIT in my etsy shop.  I’ll list it in the a.m.!  feb-23-014.jpgIt’ll include the lantern, 4 different ribbons, plenty of buttons, star rhinestones and sequins.  It’ll also have the little tealight and I cut little paper tags to match!

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Finally matted and framed some cross-stitch

I framed this cross stitch poorly (no mat so the stitching was against the glass, it was framed smaller, etc.) and it really needed to be redone.  Finally went out got a mat, found an old frame (hideous 80’s cream with tan in the creases), repainted the frame, and put it all together.   Very happy now that the stitching will probably keep much better.

I did do the cross stitch but it was not this month, or even this year, even the cleaning of the stitching was done months ago — so  all I did today was painting the frame and bringing it all together - love that a theme this week was remake)

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Day 20: My glassy past

I have fallen own miserably these past few days. I’m producing, but not documenting, so instead I present a piece of writing that explains, perhaps, my fascination with glass…

My Past in Glass

I grew up in Charleston, WV, in a neighborhood whose eastern boundary was dominated by two large glass plants. The Libby Owens Ford plant, with five towering smoke stacks, each bearing one of the letters spelling “Libby,” made plate glass. Across the street was the Owens Illinois bottle plant. My dad, a mechanical engineer, worked for the gas plant — Owens Libby Owens – that supplied the glass plants.

This caused a great deal of confusion for me as a child. What field did my dad work in? Was it gas? Was it glass? And what was his company’s name? Libby Owens Owens Libby Ford Owens Libby…

I am the youngest of six kids in a good Catholic family, and a year or two before I was born, the parish built a brand new church on a nice piece of bottom land created by filling in a ravine that was less than a mile from the glass plants. The fill material contained large amounts of waste from the plants.

The fill wasn’t the only glass waste on the church property. The far end of the unpaved church parking lot was occupied by three or four huge (or so it seemed to me at the time) piles of cullet. On the weekends, my sister and I would ride our bikes over there and scramble up and down what amounted to heaps of broken glass – shards of plate glass, lumps of bottle glass. I am not sure how we managed to avoid slicing ourselves to ribbons, but I don’t remember ever cutting myself. In the summer, the glitter was almost blinding, and, in the beating sun, the glass seemed to relive its birth in the glass furnaces, radiating powerful, nearly intolerable wave of heat.

The plate glass and bottle glass was actually a very pale green. We searched through the piles for interesting pieces of glass – angular chunks and smooth bubble-filled blobs, that, in a mass rather than a sheet, were a beautiful sea foam color. My mother liked to use the glass chunks in the bottoms of vases, to hold stems of iris and other cut flowers upright. We gave some of our finds to her; others we hoarded, like gleaming gems, for ourselves.

To the west of the church and the adjacent Catholic school was an area where the filled land and the remains of the wooded ravine blended, and a meandering creek ran through both. At recess, the creek was a boundary we dared not cross lest we risk the wrath of Sister Regina Cecilia, but we crossed it with impunity on the weekends when we’d exhausted our explorations of the glass piles. Over time and through endless cycles of freezing and thawing, the fill in that area – which included massive pieces of glass and fire brick — pushed up through the soil. The woods, where thrushes still sang, seemed like the site of some magical ruin, full of tumbled columns and shattered idols.

The glass plants eventually went the way of most U.S. glass production. To make way for a mall, the Libby smoke stacks were demolished in one of those spectacular public explosions, where some lucky person is chosen to push the button that detonates the charge. But in the days before the button was pushed, many people raided the what remained of the glass furnaces and hauled off huge chunks of that sea foam green glass. My sister was one of them, and the pieces she shared with me are now adorning my landscape.

My sister discovered Gabbert Cullet last year, and we finally went there together a few weeks ago. Gabbert Cullet receives all the glass cullet from the world-renowned Fenton Glass factory. When I pulled into the glass lot, my jaw dropped. It was the back of the St. Agnes parking lot, twenty-fold. Huge glittering piles of glass – none of it sea foam green. Cobalt, amethyst, periwinkle, lavender, ruby. Cinder block bays full of sloping piles of glass that were fifteen feet high where they met the back wall.

We spent two hours there, scavenging for the very best pieces. My sister kept spying something intriguing halfway up a glass pile, so I would charge up to examine it. Actually, “Charge up” is not really accurate. I would slowly plant one foot into the pile and test my weight to make sure I wouldn’t slide, then plant my other foot, working my way up with that long-forgotten sound and sensation of glass sliding and shifting and crunching beneath my feet.

At a dollar a pound, it’s very easy to go overboard, forgetting how heavy glass is. I restrained myself pretty well, accumulating possibilities then periodically pausing to reevaluate and cull. I ended up filling the equivalent of a shoe box for $10. Every time I pore over my haul, I know it was $10 well-spent on an enormous supply of raw material for my jewelry. But it I’d bought nothing, it would have been worth the experience to reconnect with my past in glass.

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Day 22 - So glad it’s Friday

I think the relief of ‘FRIDAY!’ is residual from my own days at school and work. Saturdays aren’t that much of a change around here, The Baby will still make me get up much earlier than I’d like, but at least the pressure of getting the First Grader off to school on time properly clothed, fed and presentable will be alleviated. We can sit around in our jammies and pick our toes all day if we so desire, although I admit we have yet to spend a day quite like that.

Anyway, I had to grab the morning nap to hurriedly throw together a ‘thing’ for today. It’s a simple stranded bracelet with some super cheap blue glass beads I got off ebay a few years ago. The brownish ones are Czech fire polished rounds with a blue coating that you can’t see very well. But occasionally it hits the light just so and you see a nice dark almost metallic blue. I bought these 2 Christmases ago for a project and this month I’ve used up most of the left overs. They are quickly becoming one of my favorite versatile beads.

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Sparkling Grape Juice Stitch Markers

This is a set made with beautiful faceted glass beads and swarovski crystals. These were the last of my faceted amethyst drop beads. Seems like everything runs out when you don’t have any money. It took me a while to make these since I hurt my wrist sometime yesterday. Not sure what I did to it but it’s been difficult doing what I normally do without any pain.

Sparkling Grape Juice Stitch Markers

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Pretty, vacant

Pretty, vacant
Title: Pretty, vacant
Description: Empty bling vase – crystal glass vase adorned with diamonds rhinestones
Inspiration: Today is Paris Hilton’s birthday (1981)

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Day 17 - Going on a date :)

I wasn’t sure I’d have something visible to post today. I skipped my normal crafty time when The Baby took his nap this morning and did some much needed home-maker type stuff. Laundry, dishes, etc. Scrubbed my bathroom sink and the toilet. I really should have done the shower as well but hey, let’s not get overly ambitious. Poor Daddy would have come home from work and left again, thinking he was in the wrong house.

But I do have a date planned this afternoon with the First Grader, hence my rush to get other things done. We do this occasionally, but we are long overdue. Daddy and The Baby went with us on Hooky day, so today it’s just us. We are going to see Spiderwick, grab some food and maybe hit a store or two. Hey, there’s an AC Moore right next to the theater! Hmmmm…
So we’ll go meet Daddy at work when his shift is done, give him The Baby and we’ll take off for our grand adventure.

Anyway…back to my thing. The Baby actually went BACK TO SLEEP after he woke up from his early morning nap. This is a rare occurrence. It took it as a sign from above that I should sift through the pile of beads and findings that are covering one end of the dining room table. And voila. I found some glass discs onto which I had already looped a headpin. Grabbed some chain, a handful of brass dangles and circles and jump rings and here you go.

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Fireworks and Caramel

Been trying to keep up with making stitch markers. I’m getting in that stage that I’m wanting to do everything but. It’s okay though I’m just having a hard time thinking up combos of beads I like. I made the ever famous Fireworks set but this time for knitter. Then I made caramel which I’m not sure how I feel about yet.
Fireworks Stitch Markers

Caramel Stitch Markers

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Day 16: Glass pendant finished!

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Day 15: SQUEEEE! I love the way this is going!

Remember this? See that piece in the lower left corner?

This is what I’ve started doing with it! I’m really awful at including things to provide a sense of scale, but you can see my beading needle on the left.  The piece of glass is about 2.25″ long. The “beach” glass is so much easier to deal with than that damned slippery agate.

I am doing a happy dance! SQUEEEEEE!

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Day 14: Tumbled glass

First, before I get into the glass, here’s the start of a bracelet.

My plans from my gigantic glass haul from Gabbert Cullet included tumbling some of it. These pieces tumbled for about a day and a half (part of that time quite inefficiently, because I didn’t realize I hadn’t gotten the drum lid on tight enough, and all the water had leaked out). It’s way cooler IRL than it is in the photo. That piece at the top of the photo is a beautiful chartreuse color. That funky half-red, half-clear piece is a part of a basket handle, where the clear glass handle is affixed to the colored basket.

I’ve included a close up of the red striped piece, because it is so darned cool.

I can’t wait to start incorporating these into jewelry.

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Spotted Ebony Stitch Markers

Quickly whipped these stitch markers up. These were the last of my snowflake beads. Sad to see them go. I won’t be able to purchase any stone beads for a while because of money issue. Until then I will be using my glass beads that I seem to have an abundance in. I do still have stone beads but I would like to replenish the ones that have been used all up.

Spotted Ebony

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Hearts of glass

Hearts of glass

Title: Hearts of glass
Description: Green glass hearts necklace & earrings with copper accents
Inspiration: Today is Valentine’s Day; the music of Blondie (Deborah Harry)

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Day 10: It’s all about the edges

OK, I didn’t really do anything on Saturday except shop for the tools that would allow me to accomplish what I did today.

Remember the mountains of glass from Day 8? One of my ideas for using the glass was to find pieces that were roughly cylindrical, tumble them in my rock tumbler to give them a beach glass kind of finish and smooth all the sharp edges and then bead over them, kind of like I did on the agate in one of my earlier posts (day 3 or 4, maybe?)

Then I came across a bay in the glass lot full of black carnival glass cullet. If you’re not familiar with carnival glass, it has an iridized finish. Go to www.ddoty.com and take a look at that plate with the grape motif. The 2″ shard below comes from a similar piece — perhaps that very pattern. My camera cannot begin to do justice to the iridescence.

I went totally nuts in carnival glass bay. The colors were gorgeous beyond belief. A lot of what I picked up will need to be broken into smaller pieces and have the edges smoothed (so Saturday, I bought a rotary tool with a diamond bit).

My idea is to create beaded bezels around these carnival glass shards (and I picked some shards of carnival glass on transparent green, red, and pink glass.) I’ve never done this kind of netted bezel before, but that’s the technique I want to use, since some of the glass is transparent. The second photo is my 1st stab at a netted bezel.

I’ll probably ditch this first attempt and start over, now that I have a better understanding of how to make the bezel snug up tight against the glass.

The last photo is an older piece I did with a beaded bezel around a dichroic glass cabochon, but this is the kind where the cab is mounted on a backing fabric. But you can at least see the concept I’m working toward with the carnival glass pieces. These are a real challenge, because in addition to being irregular in shape and sometimes in thickness as well, most of them are not flat, since they are pieces from broken bowls and vases and the like.

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Mini Green and Golden Cream

Made some stitch markers using some new beads and old beads. I finally got my bead order from February that I have been awaiting for. When I opened the package I was amazed at the tear drop bead’s size. They were tiny tiny beads and it just never occurred to me they would be that small. These beads were bought on sale half off and I just didn’t bother to look at the size. I like them but they are harder to work with. I’m sure I’ll find some really great way to make them into stitch markers. I used some today as an experiment to see if they will be successful. I’ll be selling them as stitch markers for knitting socks with and for those that don’t want large stitch markers. The end result is a tiny stitch marker the dangle is .50 inches tall and the bead is .25 inches tall. Itty bitty. Then I used my gold stone that I love so much.

golden cream
mini green

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thing 10: glass garbage gong

It’s not very complicated, but it’s one of my favorite instruments-of-the-day so far! I found this piece of glass– I think it was a coffee table once– in the garbage. Suspended from jute and struck with a rubber mallet, it sounds like this. (Use headphones or good speakers if you can - the stereo effects are great.)

I think I should tie it to a frame in three directions so it doesn’t swing around so much.

glass garbage gong

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Sophisticated Blue Stitch Markers

Made some blue stitch markers. These are a popular set that I have made around 6 times already. They are my personal favorite too because I like blue and love these metallic blue beads with the glass pearl combination.

blue stitch markers

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Day 8: Mountains of glass

I’m squeaking in under wire at 11:45 p.m. I was on the road for most of the day, on the way to WV to visit family. My sister and I decided to meet at Gabbert Cullet. (Google them to find their web site.) Too long a story to describe how we found out about this place, but it has all the cullet from the nearby Fenton factory (even though Fenton is now closed) and perhaps from other glass factories as well.

Oh. My. God. My sister and I spent more than two hours there. Below is a photo of just one part of the glass lot. The cullet is sold for $1 per pound. Tomorrow, I’ll post photos of what I bought — pieces that I intend to incorporate into jewelry.