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The Jewelry Architect: Techniques and Projects for Mixed-Media Jewelry PDF

145 Pages·2010·18.65 MB·English
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T H E Crafts / Jewelry COMbINE JEWELRY-MAKINg T H E J E W E L R Y J TECHNIquEs fOR sTuNNINg REsuLTs E includes W A R C H I T E C T instructional K A T E M c K I N N O N DVD E Discover how to merge wirework, metal clay, beadwork, and traditional metalsmithing to L techniques + projects for mixed-media jewelry create one-of-a-kind pieces of art jewelry. With The Jewelry Architect, jewelry artist Kate R McKinnon guides you on a creative journey of techniques and projects as she uses a Y variety of materials and tools to create art gallery–quality bracelets, necklaces, and rings. includes A Plus, with the included DVD, Kate will instruct you on all the techniques needed to make instructional R beautiful mixed-media jewelry. Watch and learn Kate’s tips on the best methods of DVD C reinforcing beadwork, binding edges, stringing components, forming metal clay bands, H and so much more. She will show you how mixed techniques and media can combine I beautifully into original personal embellishments. T E C about the author T Kate McKinnon is a mixed-media mt e jewelry artist who lives and works in ixc eh Tucson, Arizona. Her work focuses dn -miq on the engineering of how elements u ee work together, connect, and grow into ds ia + finished pieces of jewelry. Kate started je p working in metal clay when it was first wr o ej introduced in America, and her work le ryc stands out in her field not only for its professional construction t s but also for her focus on simple techniques and safe handling. f o r She won the prestigious Rio Grande Saul Bell award in 2005 for her innovative design, and teaches and lectures internation- ally. Kate is the author of four other books on jewelry making, M $26.95 / 10BD04 including Sculptural Metal Clay Jewelry. c K I N N O N T H E J E W E L R Y A R C H I T E C T K A T E M c K I N N O N techniques + projects for mixed-media jewelry Editor: Jean Campbell Art Director: Liz Quan Designer: Lee Calderon Photo Stylist: Ann Swanson Production: Katherine Jackson Photography: Joe Hancock Step Photography: Joe Coca © 2011 Kate McKinnon Photography © Joe Hancock Step Photography © 2011 Interweave Press LLC Video © 2011 Interweave Press LLC All rights reserved. This digital eBook is for your private use only. It is not authorized for any other use, including copying and distributing to others. Interweave Press LLC 201 East Fourth Street Loveland, CO 80537-5655 interweave.com Printed in China by Asia Pacific Offset Ltd. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data McKinnon, Kate. The jewelry architect : techniques and projects for mixed-media jewelry / Kate McKinnon. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-1-59668-176-7 (pbk.) ISBN 978-1-59668-911-4 (eBook) 1. Jewelry making. I. Title. TT212.M39254 2010 739.27--dc22 2010012421 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I have always wanted to be the kind of artist who takes the time to talk to eager beginners about their work, and who freely answers questions about technique or craftsmanship. I love people like that. I carry the generosity of people who took this time with me, particularly Allison Shock, Pamela Engebretson, Gail Crosman Moore, Dustin Tabor, and Kate-Drew Wilkinson. Special thanks go to my friend Scott Bartky, whose gentle spirit and open intelligence helped me make sense of my own obligation to always keep an eye out for an opportunity to do my work more simply, elegantly, and cleanly. Scott lived by the idea that one can have a caper-filled, exciting existence, be a precise craftsperson, an eager student of life, a responsible scientist, and also run your life and studio in a way that also helps others. I miss you, Scott, and am grateful for the chances I had to work with you. CONTENTS IntroDuctIon 07 StrIngIng 22 BEADwork 36 projects projects ElEmEntS 08 24 Puck’s Bracelet 38 Corset Stitch Cuff 10 Clasps 28 Dragonflower Bracelet 44 Peep Cuff 16 Ear Wires 32 Victorian Button Necklace 50 Ouroboros Bracelet 18 Ring Findings 56 Riverbed Bracelet 66 Felt Cupcakes 70 Felt Leaf Necklet wIrE AnD mEtAlwork 74 gAllEry 102 BASIc SkIllS 112 projects 76 Pearl Cluster 80 Ancient Chain with Recycled Glass 84 Mechanical Chain rESourcES 140 88 Kaleidoscope Setting ABout thE Author 142 92 Cocktail Pod Ring InDEx 143 96 Treasure Boxes INTRODuCTION One of our most charming human traits is our love of orna- media. Jewelry seems to fill my creative urge in a variety of ment and architecture. Since the days of the cave, we’ve ways. I love the smallness of it; it’s manageable and can be been picking up shells and stones with holes, using plant and made in almost any type of space. I can incorporate painting animal fibers for stringing material, and digging treasure out or photography, and I love the combination of precise and free of the ground to ornament our bodies and dwellings. Most thinking that goes into making small works. So far, I’m content other animals content themselves with nature as they find it; to work in miniature. not us. We want to paint it, bejewel it, rearrange it, and sparkle it up. Some of the ornament we make seems to spring from The projects in the book use a wide variety of materials, includ- our very souls, and be about our need for mythology, religion, ing beads, metal, and wire, and showcase a variety of ways or symbolism. Some springs from our desire to leave behind to make settings or to string, hang, or present your favorite something of beauty, something that will survive us and ornaments. Whether we are working with beads, wire, metal, continue to give joy or to impress the world with our magnifi- or felt, you can see the overlap in components, design, and the cence, our generosity, or our wealth long after we are gone. principles of connection. Each way of making jewelry presents Me, I just like to see how elements combine; I like colors, its own strengths and weaknesses, and I use them all, drawing transition areas, connections, and joins. on what works best for the specific needs of each piece. I am inspired by clever solutions, by clean connections, and When making a piece, my focus is on how to bring what I by those who explore not only the edges of their creativity, but know about movement, connection, longevity, and presenta- the limits of their materials. I am always looking for a better way tion to its design, and to further those aims, I work in any mate- to do things, and like an octopus, or a bower bird, two crea- rial and use any technique that can help me. tures that do share our love of bits and bobs, I am constantly surrounded by small treasures and found objects that cry out to If there are techniques shown here that you haven’t tried your- be set, hung, pierced, bezeled, or otherwise made wearable. self, or materials you haven’t yet played with, I encourage you to experiment and perhaps add something new to your own I find artists on the whole to be a very curious bunch, and repertoire as a designer. almost everyone I know who makes art works in several Recycled Bottle beads by Bronwen Heilman. 7 ELEMENTS I consider myself primarily a maker of components, an engineer of connections. I spend most of my creative time making bits and pieces, elements and sections and clasps, and only when the mood strikes do I assemble them into finished pieces. Working this way gives me great freedom as a designer, as there is little pressure to produce specific results, especially those based on a fixed idea that I or someone else had. When I sketch, or when I daydream about making things, I am usually focused on things such as areas of joinery or small ideas for engineering that grow into bigger ideas for finished pieces. My finished jewelry is usually an illustration of some concept I had about movement, structure, or an improvement on a common theme. Presented in this section are some of my favorite essential components, each of which is open to almost limitless variety and interpretation. CLASpS EAR WIRES RING fINDINGS 1.1 SCuLPTuRAL S-HOOK 2.1 SIMPLE EAR WIRES 3.1 RIVET POST RING 1.2 REMOVABLE BALL-END CLASP 2.2 SCuLPTuRAL 3.2 WRAP RING 1.3 SIMPLE TOGGLE CLASP ONE-PIECE EARRINGS Lampworked beads by Joyce Rooks. 9

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Innovative jewelry artist Kate McKinnon takes you on a creative journey of techniques and projects in The Jewelry Architect as she uses a variety of materials and tools to create gallery-quality bracelets, necklaces, and rings. Beautiful color photographs and clearly written instructions will give y
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