Uncategorized

  • Wedding Ornaments

    No new techniques but two dear friends just got married and I finally thought of a gift for the couple who has everything- a handmade, personalized ‘First Married-Christmas’ ornament in their wedding colors. I made four of them before I settled on two that were nice enough to gift. The first one was too…

  • Accessible Cutters

    This idea is just clever enough that you may want to try it in your studio, too.I decorate a lot of hanging ornaments and there are many shapes I repeat in clay which can be tedious. I drew a page of shapes I wanted and gave it to a friend in the NWPCG guild,…

  • Cephalopod

    Old beads made useable with some new wirework.

  • Steampunk Honeybees

    Here are my entries in the NWPCG Artist’s Swap at the end of May. The theme is ‘Things with Wings’. All of the clay is Cernit, along with mica powder, miniature metal ‘gears’, magnets, and a lot of patience. (Click on the post title if you can’t see the gallery.)

  • Cylindrical Mirror Beads

    A simple tutorial to mirror (Natasha) beads and how to turn them into cylindrical beads.

  • Dichroic Polymer

    I’ve created the best and easiest polymer clay faux dichroic glass you’ll ever make. It’s not made of exclusive or expensive materials. It’s not made with alcohol inks that may fade over time. If you follow my techniques, all you’ll need to get started is cheap iridescent cellophane (the kind in which gift baskets…

  • Coober Pedy Opals

    I studied a lot of opals from around the world before deciding that Australian opals from the Coober Pedy mines were the most beautiful- and the ones I wanted to ‘recreate’. Plus I was intrigued that 60% Coober Pedy residents live underground to escape the intense winter heat. I built on my experiments making…

  • Persian Blue

    For the last month I’ve been creating polymer clay turquoise. After eight attempts to perfect my former technique, I think I have it now! I made a tutorial for making the beautiful turquoise with as many or as few inclusions as one likes, and it can be adapted to any shade of turquoise one…

  • In the meantime

    Since April, the Northwest Polymer Clay Guild is meeting on Zoom twice a week. I had a space downstairs set up while I’m getting my clay studio ready. Here’s a few dining table creations…

  • Getting it together

    Scraping, sanding, spackling, sanding, priming, sanding, painting, cleaning… finally finished! Hung new curtains, moved in a few things but like all new studio configuration, it’s subject to change to what works best.