Everybody must get stoned
Jun. 28th, 2009 11:01 pmI spent the afternoon goofing off. Decided to try my hand at stone-cutting with a few pieces I found at the beach plus I did some really bad practice scrimshaw on a couple of bits of shell that I wasn't overly fond of. Shell is much much harder to work than bone or horn but man am I out of practice. Those lines are terrible. Oh well. Next one I do will be better.
Pendants by ~dv-girl on deviantART
The top two are bits of shell. The first one is a broken piece from a greenish tinged bit of scallop shell. Not sure what sort of snail the second is. Tried a bit of scrimshaw on them both, though I'm very rusty and they were just practice pieces. Inked the scallop with black and the snail with white.
On the bottom row, I believe the two green stones are malachite. I cut them both from the same larger stone. It's fairly soft and sands easily. It's also magnetic. The color/pattern was better in the direction I cut the smaller piece but sadly it also put me cutting across a fracture and meant I couldn't get any large pieces from it.
The red stone is, I think red poppy jasper. Whatever it is, it's a very hard stone, only barely more malleable than flint. This piece was just a pebble that I ground down a little.
Next I'll have to teach myself silver smithing so that I can make mounts for the stones.
Pendants by ~dv-girl on deviantART
The top two are bits of shell. The first one is a broken piece from a greenish tinged bit of scallop shell. Not sure what sort of snail the second is. Tried a bit of scrimshaw on them both, though I'm very rusty and they were just practice pieces. Inked the scallop with black and the snail with white.
On the bottom row, I believe the two green stones are malachite. I cut them both from the same larger stone. It's fairly soft and sands easily. It's also magnetic. The color/pattern was better in the direction I cut the smaller piece but sadly it also put me cutting across a fracture and meant I couldn't get any large pieces from it.
The red stone is, I think red poppy jasper. Whatever it is, it's a very hard stone, only barely more malleable than flint. This piece was just a pebble that I ground down a little.
Next I'll have to teach myself silver smithing so that I can make mounts for the stones.