Thursday, January 26, 2017

Wire Wrap Ring Tutorial

Wire wrap rings are not (as far as I have been able to determine) actually Period. However, they have a reasonably period look, and are quick and easy to make.

Tools/Materials:

Wire (I use 20-gauge copper wire from Unkamen Supplies on Etsy)
Beads (the beads in this tutorial are 7.4mm plastic pearl beads)
Mandrel
Wire Snips
Pliers

Process:

1. Cut desired length of wire. This takes some trial and error, to determine what length you prefer for the look you are trying to achieve. Longer wire can wrap more times around the bead. Tip! Err on the side of too long at first. You can always snip off the excess.

2. Thread the bead onto the wire, and bend the wire in half so that the bead is at the center.


3. Wrap the loose ends of the wire in opposite directions around your mandrel (I use a ring-sizing stick now, but in the past I've used everything from a broom stick to a Tide-to-Go pen). Wrap all the way around, back to the bead on each side. While holding the bead in place, tug gently on the loose ends to ensure the wire is wrapped snugly around the mandrel.

4. Wrap the wire around the perimeter of the bead at least once (I usually circle the bead two or three times), to encircle it. Make sure to leave at least an inch of wire on each end.

5. Take the ring off the mandrel. Wrap the ends around the band of the ring until you run out of length. Use the pliers to crimp down the end tightly against the band--you don't want pokey bits stabbing somebody's fingers when they wear your ring! The band will shift around a bit as you do this. Try to minimize it, but don't worry overmuch. We'll correct it in the next step.

6. Place the ring back around the mandrel. Work it with your fingers (and the pliers, if needed) to achieve the circular band and the desired look around the bead. As you gain experience making the rings, this is where your creativity can really come into play (see finished examples, below).






7. Take the ring back off the mandrel. Et voila! Your ring is complete!

Basic ring.


Oval bead.

Fancy wire wrap.

Wednesday, January 11, 2017

Nobelese Largesse Swap 11: Kingdom/Household Pride

The theme for Nobelese Largesse Swap #11 is Kingdom/Household Pride. It's actually a theme I suggested--I figured we could all learn a little about someone else's kingdom while we were at it! My recipient is Lady Izza bint Amat al-Rahman, who lives in the Shire of Arenal in Meridies.

Meridies is crazy. That was my first impression, anyway, as I began browsing around the kingdom website. Did you know they have FOUR populace badges?! Four! So, I had to find out a bit more about these badges if I intended to incorporate them into my project.


Other items I considered incorporating into my project were Meridies' kingdom arms, the arms of the Shire of Arenal, and Izza's own arms. Putting all of these things onto a single item would be WAY too busy, so I decided to pare it down to the Kingdom badge (but ...which one?!) and a single set of the wings from Arenal's arms. I planned to do a limp-bound book (hooray for new skills!), with the kingdom badge on the front and the wings on the back.

I tried to find out about the Meridies badges on my own. Google didn't reveal anything, though. Then I tried asking in various groups on Facebook, still to no avail. Finally, I had to ask my recipient (via the swap coordiantors) which badge she preferred to use, since as best as I could figure they're all interchangeable.

The answer came back: Izza prefers the third option above. Great! The leather I had chosen for the project was white already, so it should be easy to tool and paint the black bar and the three stars on the front, and the blue wings on the back.

I've only ever done plain books before, so I wasn't sure exactly how to place the designs to be centered on the covers. I figured, though, that I could just bind up the book and *then* tool the decorations, because I could open it to lay the covers flat on the marble slat for tooling.

The binding went well: I did five folios of ten pages each, for a hundred-page book (5 folios x 10 sheets = 50, front-and-back = 100 pages). After folding the flap over and securing it with a white leather cord (photo, right), I worried that the Meridies badge would look really squished in the visible front cover space. But then I realized that the flap itself could be one third of the badge design! This made me really happy.

That happiness was short-lived.

I don't know if it was the dying process or the tanning process (or both) for this particular leather, but it did not take to tooling AT ALL. And then the paint wouldn't adhere to the surface, either. And in the process of fighting with it, several of the pages got stained. All in all, it was a catastrophic failure--completely unsalvageable.

I was not at all eager to jump into anything else even remotely experimental at this point--the deadline loomed, the holidays were upon me, AND we were in the late stages of buying our first house. So I opted for a tried-and-true item: a Viking chain necklace. They are from the correct time period for Izza's persona, and I was 100% confident I would not experience any project failures--catastrophic or otherwise!

Actually, I made two necklaces. Both necklaces are woven from 26 gauge enameled copper wire (I sure do love that wire!), with five starting petals. I used a trusty Sharpie marker as my mandrel.

The first one I made was not entirely period--it's my own created design of single-weave in one color over double-weave of another color. In this case, it was single black and double silver -- Meridies colors. The inner core and outer layer are woven concurrently and drawn together.

Single black over double silver in progress.
Then, because this is not technically a period design, I also made a standard Viking double-weave chain in just silver.

Silver double-weave, before drawing.

They went in the mail today, and should be delivered on Friday. I hope Izza likes them!