Showing posts with label kiln fired enamels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kiln fired enamels. Show all posts
Tuesday, 14 October 2014
Manor House enamelling
I'm back again with a post about the enamelling class I took with my lovely mum on our holiday at The Manor House Hotel. Blogger is telling me I've spelt enamelling wrong, it thinks I'm American.
Enamelling is a technique done on copper blanks. I'm sure you can do it on silver too, but that would be expensive. It involves enamelling powder (glass?), small chunks of glass, strings of glass and millefiori beads. I'm sure there is much more you could add, but this is what we had.
This first picture shows my first piece. I put it together on the little metal rack and then put it into a kiln for about 3 minutes until it all melted.
Here is how it turned out:
I'm really pleased with it, it's not quite as blurry as this photo suggests! It has a little hole (at the bottom, the photo is upside-down) so I can make it into a pendant. I think the middle bit with the white stringers looks like Chinese writing.
Here is how the back looks after being in the kiln. A bit of the enamel bled onto the back, I'll have to remove that with my pliers as it'll feel rough against my skin.
I didn't remember to take any more before photos I'm afraid, I tried my best all week to take progress shots, but this was my first class and we'd just driven for 7 and a half hours to get there! This uses red powder which burns very easily, so I didn't add the millefiori as that takes longer to melt. This pendant took just one minute to melt, it has burnt around the edges, but I quite like it. I just added strings in red, orange and yellow.
Of course, when I saw the bunny blank, I had to make a bunny! Nice and simple in a lazuli blue with a millefiori tail. I made the diamond shape as a separately pendant but it didn't turn out as nice as I thought it would. I think it will look good with the bunny if I can find a way to string them together. I used millefiori and small chunks of glass on that one. The first version didn't come out great, so I added glue, more powder and some more chunks and I like it better now.
We both really enjoyed enamelling, it's such a creative craft as you literally start with a blank slate. I'm thinking of saving for a kiln next year and this would be top of my crafts-for-kilns list!
Next up, silk painting.
I'm going to be linking a lot of posts to Something New for 2014 this month, and this is another as I've never done enamelling before.
handmade by
Wendy
at
08:00
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crafty devils said ...
Categories:
craft class,
enamelling,
kiln fired enamels,
Manor House Hotel
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