Wednesday, October 31, 2012

SIMPLE SOLDERING IS HERE!!!!!

Today is the best day ever. Not only can I hear the cheers of the crowds assembling for the SF Giants victory parade in downtown SF, the Fed Ex man just delivered two boxes of MY BOOK!

Here they are!
They're heavy!

Here it is!!!
For those of you who have preordered the book, your signed copy will go out tomorrow. As a special thank you I have a few little gifts that I am tucking in your package, including my DVD that came out a few years ago on Basic Stringing Techniques.

For those of you who would like to place an order, you can jump on over to my Etsy site and make your purchase. If you make your order before November 5, I'll include the bonus gifts in your packages as well.

Thanks so much to everyone who supported me through this crazy, fun, intense, and rewarding experience. I love my book and hope all of you do, too. Now I gotta run and find a good autographing pen. I have a lot of signing ahead of me.

Go Giants!

Friday, October 26, 2012

How to Clean Metal Jewelry Tools.

My tools work hard. They get hammered on. They get used in class. They get packed in a box and shipped across country. Consequently they are not the prettiest tools on the block, but who needs pretty when they are so solid and sturdy?

Sometimes though there is a blemish that I can't ignore...RUST!!! Once in a while when I unpack my tools from a class or if I accidentally leave them next to a corrosive (like Silver Black or other corrosive solutions) or get them wet and forget to dry them off, I spy little sections of rust starting to form on my beloved tools. Rust is the enemy of steel and it has to be dealt with before it becomes an issue.

If I see just a small bit on the surface I'll just buff it away with a swipe of steel wool, but that is just a temporary solution. Rust has a tendency to creep and needs to be eradicated before real damage is done.

No worries! The tool doctor is in and let's meet the patient that I am restoring to health today and the review the supplies I'm using.

My dapping block. Check out the rust. Ick.


Here are my supplies from left to right: WD40, 0000 Steel Wool, 1000 grit sandpaper, Scotch 3M Metal Finishing Pad (Find them in the paint section of your hardware store near the steel wool) and Pro Polish Pads (the best thing for polishing metal EVER. Period. I stock them in my Etsy store.)


First, lay an old towel or rag on your work surface and make sure that you are in a well ventilated area. Spray the effected area with the WD40.

Then grab your steel wool and buff the WD40 into the surface of the tool. See how the rust starts to disappear. Don't wipe off the WD40 yet. Keep it on for the next step.

Next, follow up with the fine grit sandpaper. This helps to refine the surface of the metal. Make sure to use 1000 grit or finer as you don't want to mar the surface of the tool. After this step wipe away the WD40 from the tool.

Use the 3M pad and buff the surface again. This pad is a great tool to bring metal back to life. It resurfaces the tool and makes it look almost like new.

And finally, grab a Pro Polish pad and buff the surface one last time. Make sure that the tool is completely wiped clean with no moisture on the surface. If the Pro Polish pads get wet they leave a gummy residue behind. But used dry they will make the metal shine like new!

Look! The surface is shiny and clean and there is no trace of rust to be found! The WD40 helps the metal resist further rusting. While you're at it check out your pliers, too. I'll bet the tips of your chain nose and round nose pliers might need a little love, too. 

My Xuron tools were looking a little sad, but are now revived and ready to work on an upcoming wire wrap project. 

Taking a little time to tend to your tools will give you many years of use. Do you have any tips on how you care for your tools? Share them in the comments, I'd love to hear them.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Are You Innovative?

Then the Nunn Design Innovation Team 2013 is looking for you!

Nunn Design is a purveyor of marvelous, high-quality jewelry components. The company is the brainchild of Rebecca (I call her Becky) Nunn, a designer and jewelry artist that I admire greatly. Her company makes lovely and unique jewelry components that are really inspiring to work with.

I got an email the other day from Becky asking if I would pass along the word about the search for new members for her 2013 Innovation Team. Would I? You bet.

Photo from the Nunn Design Project Gallery
Here is a bit about the requirements from the Nunn Design Blog "...We are seeking artists who love to push the envelope. Are you an innovator? A trendsetter? Do you work in varied mediums (paper, resin, polymer, epoxy, metals, fiber, and more)? If you’re a creative powerhouse who wants to work on the inside of innovation, an artisan of any medium —we want to know about you."

If you would like to read more and to submit an application click this link and check out the full post on the Nunn Design Blog. Good luck!