Guess Who Has Started Metalsmithing?

Me, That’s Who!

My First Finished Pendant!

For a long time now, ever since I began selling my woven wire pendants actually, people have asked for “smaller,” “simpler” and/or “silver” designs. I’ve been so often told “I really love your work, but do you have something that is…(insert one of those words?”).

As an artists working with a specific set of materials, it’s been painful. At the start, wire weaving was new to me and I was truly enjoying the creative experience. I understood why someone wanted “not copper,” and I made woven sterling wire pieces hoping to accommodate them, but it hurt when I knew what they meant was “not wire weaving.”

Eventually I, too, began to understand why wire weaving wasn’t as attractive as a pendant set in a simple metalsmithed setting. What drove it home for me was when I read, somewhere on an internet discussion forum, that “wire weaving is for those who don’t know how to work as a metalsmith.”

Ouch!

At heart, I knew this was true to a large extent. Metalsmithing requires more tools, a stable space to work, and instruction at a more committed level than wire weaving, even if one goes the route of being self-taught. It is a larger investment that many who are just starting out are leary of taking on. You need a torch, for crying out loud! That’s like having a pet dragon! And if you go on You Tube and look up “Silversmithing,” you’re almost assured to see someone with a fairly extensive studio bench which includes a professional level torch.

You might hear someone say “you can get buy with a hand held torch from (they’ll probably say Harbor Freight), but when I read that, that little voice in MY head responded with “Yeah right. Go Big, or Go Home!”

It was disheartening, because I believed that voice for quite a while.

As well, my studio space back home in New York is fairly new, and each spring when I return, I’m not sure if I’ll have it for the rest of the season. I’m looking at that possibility again in another two months, in fact.

To me, it seemed implausible to work with metalsmithing tools in the way I have been doing my cabochon crafting. That is, part time in a true studio, and part time on the road where I stow everything away in my van and haul it out to work in a municipal park or on public lands.

For sure, it HAS been a pain to work on my lapidary like this. Sometimes I dream about finding a “real home” to live in again, just to be able to work until any hour of the night, get in a few hours and leave my project knowing I’ll come back in a few hours. Not having to pack things ALL away after a session!

But, I’ve done it. And I’m going to do it with metalsmithing. And I’ve started buying my tools! Including this beauty….

The pendant in the image at the top of this post is my first finished work. It includes one of my own cabochons, and I’m please with the results. I know that down the road I will look at it and find myself smiling at my inability to see just how crudely crafted it is. At least, I had BETTER be able to see a pretty good jump in my skill level and design sense!

The first cabochon I cut, in a class setting, vs one I cut with a few years experience in the craft

I had been wanting to learn metalsmithing for a few years, and had planned to spend a season at the rock club I belong to in Quartzsite doing just that. It was in the winter of 2020 when I told myself “Next year, you come back and learn to silversmith.”

We all know what happened in the months following the winter of 2020. Covid happened. And there was no way I was going to sit in a crowded room full of cowboy types who understood the concept of a masked man during the wild west but not the pandemic.In fact, the club specifically stated that, though shop forepersons could require masks be worn during their shifts, the club would not require it in general, nor would the be mandating any safety measures regarding distancing or sanitizing surfaces. “You’re on your own” was the exact wording, as I recall.

The next year(2021/22), the virus was raging in it’s 3rd or 4th round, and people were passing it around like a joint at Woodstock. Now, in 2023, it’s STILL with us. My brother in law has it(again) as I type this post(and, he’s been through the series of vaccinations).

But, I decided that we’d gotten to the point that, if I got iCovid, I’d likely not die. That was my bigger concern; that I’d die out on the road and my dog would end up either left alone in the van as I succumbed, or be put in a shelter when I entered a hospital.

Okay – I took a seriously negative digression there…. Back to metalsmithing!

I finally got a session in at the club and got my pendant to the point I was ready to place the stone, burnish the bezel, and polish the finished work. I did that the next week and was SO happy. I knew I was on my way.

Then, I came down to Tucson to see the big gems shows. I figured I’d go back to Quartzsite afterward and really throw myself into learning the craft. But, there was a small issue…..

I found myself, a few days ago, waking up to a feeling of drudgery about going back to Quartzsite for the rest of the season. If you’ve spent more than an afternoon in Quartzsite, you can empathize. The town is not fast-paced and well-stock with modern conveniences, to put it nicely. The internet signal is slow to non-existent. The library is the only place you can sit inside and work on online marketing. Publicly available electricity is rarer than water in the desert. The restaurants…what can I say but “Bless their hearts.(if you catch my drift).

Quartzsite, AZ: A town that had it’s Hey Day a few decades ago

And yet, I soldiered through several seasons at Quartzsite enduring these things and telling myself it was the price I paid to get my work done.

Well, this time, when I had that despondent feeling, a little voice in my head said “I bet there is somewhere in Tucson you can learn smithing at a relatively low cost.”

It takes me a while to come up with solutions at times

I asked on a Facebook Group that I’d just joined, and got some suggestions. Great ones, for someone actually living in the area, and with a few hundred dollars to drop for a series of classes or workshops. I figured there was a lapidary club, and so I googled. There was a lapidary club in Tucson! And, they have a metalsmithing shop!

I hightailed it down there and joined the next day. Saturday I’ll go for their monthly meeting, to get a feel for things, and work in the lapidary shop afterwards.(the lapidary shop is very well appointed, with Genies, a Titan, several Poly Arbors, saw to cut slabs for member use, and even a vacuum stabilization chamber, for use in stabilizing stones like turquoise, that are difficult to work with when not bolstered by the stabilization process.

My hope is that Tuesday will be my first instructional class in metalcraft. Hopefully, I’ll be getting four weekly sessions with instruction, and studio time in between, before I begin traveling back towards the northeast for the warmer months. If that happens, I feel I’ll be confident enough to proceed on my own. If not…I’ll proceed on my own with less confidence.

Look for sterling silver pendants to come in the Talisman Too Galleries in a few months(maybe sooner). And, if you don’t yet follow me on Instagram, you’ll want to if you have interest in my journey. You can find my Instagram profile at https://www.instagram.com/talismantoo/!

Meanwhile – which of the cabochons in my shop do YOU think would look good as a pendant?

American Lapidary: Selling Venue for High Quality American-Crafted Designer Cabochons

Owyhee Jasper Designer Cabochon

I’ve been cutting my own cabochons for a few years now, and people say I’ve got an eye for composition. I tend to agree; that’s always been a strong point for me.

Presently I’ve got at least two hundred stones available, but finding an audience of buyers has been problematic. At times, my cabochons get picked up almost immediately on being listed, but other times nobody seems to even see them. Disheartening!

One of my used to be *go to* selling venues on Facebook is now crickets for my offerings, while importers of factory-produced stones continue to sell. Sure, I can’t compete with cookie cutter cabs at $5 to $10, and I don’t expect to, but the site has become so deluged with that level of offerings that I feel seekers of quality stones have left the site. I know jewelry makers are still making beautiful things, so despite the inflation besieged economy, they still need to buy beautiful cabs!

Banner Image for Facebook Group American Lapidary
https://www.facebook.com/groups/americanlapidary

And so, I’ve started my own Facebook selling venue, American Lapidary. Here you’ll find well-crafted designer gemstones created by lapidary artists residing within the United States. I require selling members to provide links to their various social pages in order to vet them for inclusion. Jewelry artists looking for stones cut by established lapidary won’t have to sort through dozens of factory cut cheap stones to find materials for their projects.

Designer Cabochon - Dead Camel Jasper

While currently a showcase for my own material, American Lapidary is open to selling members from within the United States. There are a few already signed on to the group, but our buying population is still low. Hopefully once word gets out and the group starts to become more active, sellers will find it worthwhile to include their stones too.

So – please come take a look at the group and sign up as a member if you feel it will be of interest to you – the link is at facebook.com/groups/americanlapidary!

Dinosaur Bone Designer Cabochon
https://www.facebook.com/groups/americanlapidary

My shop on Etsy still carries my cabochons too, of course. Simply click on the Cabochons Section to see what I’m offering! And, to see my work in progress images(and get first dibs on stones hot off the cabbing wheels!) follow me on Instagram @TalismanToo.

Talisman Too News for Spring 2021

A year ago, the Covid-19 virus was barely on the radar for most of us. Even as the reality of what we were facing began to sink in, I don’t think most of us expected to be still living with the virus as a primary concern.

I’ve been fortunate to have fared well during this period. One thing in my favor is that I am a person who relishes solitude. Most of the things I like to do are best done alone, particularly when it comes to my small business. So, while I am definitely looking forward to things like going to a movie, gathering with friends for potluck dinners, visits with family members, I haven’t felt the terrible longing that so many have endured.

You may know that I travel cross country during the winter month; something I’ve done every year since 2010, save for the 2013/2014 season. One thing that HAS changed is my vehicle! Meet Ramses!

Ram Promaster in Desert with Saguarra

Last spring, my old van Penney, a1990 Ford E-150, got me back to New York – BARELY – and that’s not an understatement. I knew that was her last cross country ride, and began saving for a new vehicle in earnest. That’s another example of my faring better than many with this pandemic. I was able to put my first stimulus check completely aside for use as a down payment.

I had to take out a loan, and that was something I’d never done before. Looking back, it al went fine, but during the process, I was a nervous wreck. It’s a big difference, having a vehicle that I’ll be paying more than $300/month for the next five year, over a $1200 one paid for and done.

But, since it IS my home for five months a year, I’m getting off much easier than almost any other person who pays rent or has a mortgage. And, it’s been just a pleasure, to have a reliable vehicle that gets up and over the mountains without me rocking back and forth in the drivers seat in an uncontrollable urge to “help” on the steep! Plus – the room!!!!

The interior has not been finished yet. I ran out of time and cash before hitting the road in November, so I’m not going to show the interior. This summer, back in New York, I’ll be dedicating my efforts to getting Ramses in “Picture Perfect” shape. Or, perfect for me, anyway. An Instagram #VanLife Influencer, I’m not. But, if you WOULD like to follow my Instagram feed, you’ll see my day to day goings on, places I’ve traveled to,and insight into the creative process in my jewelry. Also doggy pics!, and how I personally deal with van living.

What I AM is an artisan jewelry maker! And if you recall, last spring I invested in machinery to cut and polish my own cabochons. When I got back to NY, the electricity which was hoped to go in over the winter, had not happened. But, because of Covid, my place of work was not open, and I took over the trailhead booth(which had solar power), and worked for tow months, nearly daily, on crafting cabochons.

Eventually, we reopened, and there went my studio. I was still hoping for electricity to come to my cabin, but it never did, and now it’s not looking likely, at least for a while. So, I went from mid-May until about a week ago, without firing up my machines.

I had plenty of stones to work with, and so was focused on jewelry-making. Here are a few of the pieces I created during that period, all with stones I cut myself. You’ll be able to click the images to get to the listing in my Etsy shop, so you can read about the piece if you’d like.

Caldera Paint Jasper Pendant
Tiffany STone Designer Cabochon Pendant

I’ve also been on an earring making microbinge. Here’s a link to the Earrings section of my shop, and I’ll be adding more as soon as I can photograph and edit images.

As of late February, I’m in Quartzsite, Arizona, mainly due to my ability to polug my lapidary equipment in and work. In a week or so, I will move on, and begin a slowed down journey toward my home in New York. I’ll be heading north toward either Sedona or…should I veer more westerly and head to souther Utah? I haven’t yet decided!

Designer Cabochons Available for Purchase

I never wrote a blog post about my purchase of a Diamond Pacific Genie several months ago, which surprises me. How could I have missed the opportunity?!

Montana Agate Designer Cobochon
Montana Agate

Since then I have cut several dozen cabochons, and the pleasure has been all mine. What a joy, to have my own machine, and my time not limited to one hour increments, as they are at the local rock and mineral club in Quartzsite, AZ.

My skills improved, and I am now offering a selection of my stones available for purchase within my shop on Etsy. My specialty is American-Mined Jaspers, though I do occasionally buy material which has been sourced elsewhere in the world. I am particular as to whom I buy from, and stay away from sources that aren’t confirmed as ethical mining operations. I’d rather not work with the *material of the year* if that means I might be supporting a business that uses slave labor or works their employees in unsafe conditions.

Owyhee Jasper Designer Cabochon Available at TlaismanToo.Etsy.com
Owyhee Jasper
Caldera Jasper

Most of my material is purchased from miners who have dug the rock directly from their own claims, or have purchased rock directly from such miners. Lucky for me, our American western states produce such gorgeous Jaspers like the ones above!

I am the sole lapidary artist for the cabochons I offer. I don’t outsource my cutting, and employ no assistants.

If you are a jewelry maker and are looking for artistically shaped and cut cabochons to use in your work, and also want to support ethical mining and processing of minerals, perhaps my stones will be of interest to you. View the available collection at my shop, Talisman Too.

Why I Love Instagram

I AM a social butterfly, and have gone through several metamorphosis, starting with blogging so long ago that the concept of microblogging(which referred to Twitter in it’s advent) was breaking news. I didn’t know HOW people could possibly convey their thoughts and ideas in 140 characters(or less!). I certainly couldn’t – still can’t!

Instagram Feed for Talisman Too Handmade Jewelry, Travel Adventures

But, I have adapted. I learned to optimize the various social media platforms to perform as best possible, and discovered obstacles along the way. Facebook, for example, and how they seemed to draw everyone on board with Business Pages and once we were there, effectively closed the door and shut off the lights by making it difficult to stay visible to those who had Liked us in the first place.

Twitter WAS good, and still is, for me, despite the short burst of type required, and which I almost ALWAYS found myself editing; cutting words to pare down the character count.

Pinterest, while it seems to be a top traffic generator to my Etsy shop annoys me greatly since, now that I have gotten used to Twitter 240 characters, seems to ask just too much of me with the various machinations to just VIEW the platform.

But Instagram? I like it! Well, except for the fact that I have to use my cel phone to post. Believe me, I tried to hack a way to post from my laptop and couldn’t make it work. Alas, my two finger typing has been reduced to one-finger pointing, which is the level of dexterity I seem to have, when it comes to putting word to….the ethernet. Thankfully I’m not so inept when it comes to crafting my pendants and other creative pieces.

My Instagram page isn’t like the typical Etsy shop or other branded company profile. I mix my daily visual stimulations and posts from my cross-country travels with work-in-progress shots and product photography.

My video clips are almost quaintly horrible, though I AM getting better about remembering to leave space around the focal point while I shoot so as not to cut off the top of the subject in the final clip. I am a One Take videographer, and let the world be damned to view my inability to remember words(I’m getting old) or haven’t taken a single thought about what to say before I begin.

But – people like my page, and slowly but surely my Follower Count is growing, and people are beginning to comment.

It takes work – just like ALL the social pages. But for some reason I have been able to cultivate genuine followers who are interesting, and that I am interested in. Sure, I still get the “SPECTACULAR FEED!!!111 Check me out!” comments. It’s easy to block them, and I take a small delight in doing that. And I’ve realized and accepted that it’s OKAY to not Follow Back everyone who has simply managed to not be offensive right off the bat. I don’t want to scroll through hundreds of images I’m not interested in, and you know what? If someone Unfollows me because I didn’t reciprocate to their follow – they weren’t real followers in the first place. Just like my mother would have told me if she were still alive and I was still twelve years old and doing things because I worried people wouldn’t like me unless I was acquiescent.

I find people who post interesting things so easily on the platform, and can so quickly search for topics I find intriguing. The only thing that seems trite is that, like all social platforms, they decide what should be edited away to make my feed manageable. I’d prefer to have more control over that.

So – Follow me on Instagram if you like this post. Or don’t. It’s all good.

An Historic Small Business

Small Business Saturday Harkens Back to an Every Day Lifestyle for Many

Brinegar Cabin Blue Ridge Parkway

On Saturday, November 28th, American Express will sponsor it’s sixth annual Small Business Saturday. As an entrepreneur with several online ventures, I have been planning my strategy for the day and intend to include the promotion of many other small businesses as part of my campaign.

I grew up “small business.” My father owned an independent propane gas service company, which his father had sold to him when he married. Grandpa Marcoe, a small businessman himself, divided his holdings amongst his children when they wed. The heating oil portion went to the husband of his youngest daughter, and the bar/bowling alley called Van Dyne Lanes to the oldest daughter’s husband(yes, in days back, the daughter’s husband got set up, with the expectation he would manage her welfare wisely). He kept his gasoline dealership for himself.  It was not a gas station as we think of today – instead he delivered gasoline to other garages, gas stations and private individuals who had a gas pump at their farm or residence(as did my father, who had to lock it up tight once his children began getting old enough to drive!).

On my mother’s side, her father was a milk delivery driver, who began his career with a horse-drawn wagon. She loved to make the joke “My daddy was the milkman!”

As a youngster, I was already in the minority by having a father that worked for himself in a small business venture. By the 1970’s, factory jobs were the norm for most in my community and there were several prominent one, such as Giddings and Lewis, Tobin Tool and Die, Mercury Marine and Speedqueen. Amazingly, all these companies are still operating, but I do recall the winnowing years as they pared down to survive as the Great Wave of Importing began washing upon our shores. It was tough for my father as a sole proprietor, but at least he had some semblance of control over his operations.  The factory workers were at the mercy of middle managers and factors beyond their comprehension, much less their ability to manage.

Currently, I am traveling for the winter months, as I do each year when it gets too cold to live in my woodland cabin in upstate New York. I decided to drive down the east side of the Appalachian Mountains, and in particular go through Shenandoah National Park and go the length of the Blue Ridge Parkway.

Yesterday, I stopped to visit an historic homestead along the route, the Brinegar Family Cabin. I couldn’t help but to compare my more modern way of living, despite the fact I do live in a log cabin(albeit made from a kit) without plumbing or electricity. Whereas they had fireplaces in both rooms of the house to heat during cold months, I use a portable propane heater to warm things up before heading to bed and when waking up.  But unlike the Brinegars, I abandon ship once the weather actually begins to turn cold!

The Brinegars built a root cellar and spring house to keep their perishable foods, and though I refuse to purchase ice for my cooler, I am able to make trips to town easily enough that I need only keep food for a few days. The Brinegars used an outhouse and bathed in the cold spring, and I – well, some things don’t change!

But the thing that touched me during my visit to the Brinegar Farm, was to find out that Mister Brinegar, along with farming his 125 acres, made shoes for neighbors and nearby townsfolk, as well as acted as a notary public.

Brinegar FamilyBrenigar Family InformationBrenigar Family Information

Even in a lifestyle where so very much was done on one’s own, there remained some things one wanted or needed money for. Shoemaking obviously helped Mister Brinegar to bring in those funds. In that respect, he operated a small business. It may not have been as formally organized as our small businesses of today, but no doubt he fulfilled the needs of those who sought him out and did his best to satisfy them – hallmarks of any small businessperson with a desire to succeed.

On the other hand, maybe he just found joy in making shoes! I can certainly understand that.  It’s why, after four years and with sales not yet reached $1000, I keep buying beads to work on things for my Talisman Too shop! Part of having a small business is the ability to keep blowing oxygen at the coals, hoping at some point for ignition. For me, that would mean that I could count on the business to sustain me economically.  Until then, I have other ventures, including working at the Mohonk Preserve half year, to keep me fed and clothed…and buying beads like these below, which I found at Strand Beads in Boone, NC.

Czech Glass Beads to be Made into Earrings and Bracelets for Talisman Too CollectionsHere’s one pair of earrings I put together with some of the beads yesterday.

Czech Glass Earrings in Nature Tones Boho StyleI know I ramble as I type, but am told that this sort of wandering is part of the charms of my writing. The thing I am trying to convey is that small business has been a part of our world’s culture long before the age of industrialization.  I wonder just when it was that the first small businesses came into being?

So – to wrap things up – here’s my wishes for a strong Small Business Saturday to entrepreneurs in the US this year. Do you have a small business?  Feel completely free to post a link in the comments, along with a promotional bit!