Craft Works - Let's Get Creative!
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Looks really great!
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new cardholder
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Saltdough -
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Made a half dollar dome pendant
Annealed
Pickled and cleaned up
Domed
Popped in a jump ring
Patina'd with liver of sulfur
Turned out well but the hole stretched a little. Next time I'll drill from the backside of the coin and use a drill press. Drilling a half dollar with a Dremel is surprisingly difficult!
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Looks great. I had been thinking about doing something similar with a hobo nickel. Was it hard to do?
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Had a good one last night, drawing alonside some top street artists in a gallery in E. London
Live stream here http://www.dripsandruns.com/#!watch/viznt
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This is definitely one of my favorite threads on the board. Really cool to see all the talent members have. After about 7 years without picking up a pencil I decided it was time I stopped wasting what little talent I have and do some drawing. Here's the first piece I've done since I was about 22. Still a work in progress but I think it's coming along. Portrait is of a Pawnee scout named White Horse.
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Gift for the Mrs. Done using a process that I have not done before, which is done using a 'scratchboard'.
Basically purchased a bit of cardboard that is covered with clay and a thick layer of Indian ink.
The board starts off jet black and then I scratched off the ink with a scalpel to get the image.
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Plus that drawing is insanely good!
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great shit buddy! @Cutlasshound
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And you've somehow managed to give Olive a come hither look! Great stuff @Cutlasshound
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Thanks, @Cutlasshound. I'll try and throw up another pic when I've finished. Really dig the card you made for Valentine's day.
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Here's a little hammered silver cross we made for my Godson for his Baptism at the end of the month. I was going to force a patina but I like it polished.
After cutting, hammering, and soldering.
After filing, sanding, and tumbling.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Not sure if this really qualifies as craft works, but I suppose it's as good a place as any to drop this one…
I have a couple of old Singer 31-15 sewing machines; they were originally commercial machines and were used for decades (I think they were manufactured from the 1890s to the 1960s, but I'm not sure) by factories, sweatshops and tailors everywhere. They're cast metal, heavy as sin and virtually indestructible, which is why they're still used by lots of folks who need heavy duty machines. My two were made in 1904 and 1930, and still work beautifully. Since they weren't intended for normal consumers, they were plain, and after a few decades of hard use, they look pretty beat.
Since I have two, I decided to refurbish one back in September. I disassembled it, cleaned all the parts, replaced a few of them, stripped the original paint, (probably giving myself lead poisoning in the process) then repainted, added sexy new decals and put it all back together. While I was in the process of doing all this, I lucked into an old cast iron Singer sewing table. It was covered in rust, dust and cat hair, and the wooden top was a laminated abomination, but it was essentially sound. So I cleaned and repainted the base and built a new wooden top. Then, just for the heck of it, I converted it back to treadle power, like the really old pre-electric versions, and dumped the fifties era motor.
Aside from some tuning adjustments, and a backordered slide plate, this project is finally finished. I thought I'd share some pictures, since I'm generally pleased with how it came out.
The machine looked like this when I started.
The table looked like this.
Stripped and ready for painting.
Painted and decals applied.
Clear coating.
Base repainted and reassembled.
And the complete table and machine.
Thanks for looking!