Previously on Artfire: Published On: 07-16-2012
I was perusing
Pinterest and a ton of craft sites and blogs this past weekend and came
across an awesome blog for a woman that does a lot of nifty things with
clay and gave me an awesome inspiration to try something: a mica shift.
You can find her original blog and the particular post I'm referring to over here at :
Mica shift con estrellas : www.fimoland.com
Basically
"Mica shift with stars" and with her pictures taken so well to
demonstrate the technique along with my basic understanding of Spanish
(I did take 5 years in school after all!), I was able to get the general
idea of how she did it,... I think. Next time I should try with the powders that give you that mica shift effect properly.
Unfortunately,
I think I should have actually used clay colors more like what she did,
with the mica powders and/or shinier colors than what I have; which are
drab, basic colors.
I
got my colors out and conditioned them, ran them through my pasta
machine at about setting 4 or 5 with the brown at level 9 as it was my
base layer:
I
then used my star cutters to get a few medium stars for each color
(black, dark green and a maroon I made by mixing red and black) as well
as a bunch of smaller stars in each color.
I didn't
take the in-between step picture (sorry!) but I laid out the stars on the brown,
overlapping each other here and there and proceeded to run the sheet
through the pasta machine about 10-15 times to get them imbedded in the
brown like you see here. I then took 2 different sized oval cutters and
started in on my sheet:
Once I figured I got as many as possible that would look good, I went ahead and laid them out to the side:
I
realized at about this point, they weren't really looking like the mica
shift pattern I'd been aiming for, but were now camo looking pendants!
This just means that I'll be able to make a set of them (or even two,
there's a lot!) and get them up on the site later.I
then
used the background clay to go through the machine again as it was just
the brown and had hints of the other colors. After running through the
machine, I saw that the brown had little bits of black that ended up
looking sort of woodgrain! I cut out a number of small ovals and balled
up the background clay from that. I ran it through the pasta machine
another time with that bit and got the results you see below for the
final count:
They
went in the oven and I now have 8 large oval pendants, 24 small camo,
28 thicker brown with black woodgrain effect and 1 small green/black
swirl from the leftover clay. One of these days I''' try to seal them in resin or varnish, or whatever it is you're supposed to use on clay.
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