Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Tim Holtz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tim Holtz. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Everything's an Embellishment

I started collecting vintage jewelry when I was in my early 20's. By the time I hit my early 40's, I was selling it online. I have tons of it. Don't throw any of it away. Clasps, settings, components - almost all parts of vintage jewelry, particularly if it's ornate, can be used elsewhere. You can do a lot with it to make it new and different. I took a floral component from an old broken vintage necklace, cut the attachment ends off either end - I used a jeweler's saw, because this is soft base metal, but you can use a rotary tool, and sometimes, if it's soft enough, just use your snips.

I filed the edges smooth - I did it by hand, using jeweler's files and sandpaper, but if you have a rotary tool, you could do it in a jiffy by simply grinding the rough edges until they are flush with the piece and then using a finer abrasive to smooth and polish.

Then the fun began! I changed the color of it using Alcohol Ink. The inks I choose to use are Tim Holtz's Adirondack Alcohol Inks and for purposes of simply showing you what it can do, I chose Cranberry, since it would show the complete difference in look.

Below is what the piece originally looked like:

And this is what it looks like after applying Adirondack Alcohol Ink in Cranberry. I just swabbed it on using a felted stamp applicator. It needs another coat and I'll have to use a small wrapped toothpick (or you can wrap the end of a file in felt) to get to the inside edges. This is simply for demonstration purposes, so it's not as neat and tidy as I'd normally do it:


It took about 30 seconds. It's dry, and it's permanent. I'll probably spray it with some Krylon Make it Last! just to give it a nice scratch-proof finish and to seal it, just in case.

Easy peasy. You can do this on any of your metal findings - change the color if you don't like it. If you need something to match beads, or a scrapbook entry, or something pretty for a notecard, recycle! Use found objects, broken jewelry, or anything you might just toss in the trash.

I'll post some more of my color-changes later today.

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Tim Holtz Alcohol Inks, Tiles, Tables and Beads

A couple months ago I was given some ugly old ceramic tiles. As an artisan, everything has potential for me, so when I was asked if I wanted them, I naturally said "YES!" They sat around for awhile and I tried different things, but I could get nothing to stick to them. Color just rubbed off. Then I thought about alcohol inks. I knew about them, but I'd never used them. So I went to that place where craft supplies are soooo expensive and I bought every color they had of Adirondack alcohol inks. Tim Holtz is the expert and purveyor of these fabulous inks.

So I started playing with them. The first photo is my first effort with the inks. It's one of the tiles:


It's much prettier than the photo - the colors I used were Ginger, Latte, Caramel, Cranberry and Gold. I made liberal use of the Alcohol Blending Solution.

Then I got carried away. I had an old ugly table that my neighbor gave me, and she'd painted it white. My decor is all earth tones. So I used the same colors and did the table top. This is how it turned out. Next one I'll blend better, you can see the lines where I had to re-ink my felt - but in some ways it looks nice - my friend, Karel, says it looks like tree rings. :)

What's really cool about this treatment to the table top is that just as I was getting ready to seal it I happened to spill a cup of tea on it. HORROR! Guess what? I'm not sure what the chemical properties of those inks are, but the liquid just puddled and beaded up and when I went to wipe it off, gingerly, so I wouldn't take color off the table, no color came off. None. Not even when I wiped it vigorously just to see if I COULD make color come off.

I don't treat the things I make gingerly. They have to be usable and if they can't pass a "break" test, then it's best they break before someone buys them. These inks passed the "break" test.

Now I just have to finish the table. LOL.


This is my latest effort with the alcohol inks. I inked a tile and have laid out wire and beads in a floral pattern. They're not permanently attached yet, because I'm not sure this is the design I want, but it's an idea.

I love these inks. Since I'm a working artisan, (read "starving artisan") these inks, while expensive, may be worth every penny. I sell my items at local gift shops that cater to local artisans, so we'll see how the tiles sell.