(no subject)
Dec. 6th, 2006 06:34 pmOK, this is weird.
I know I said that I was not necessarily expecting the copper plating to go smoothly. Apparently my studio demons saw this as a challenge. :P
I have nice dirty pickle. I have my copper filigree with silver visible where the solder ran. I have various bits of cheap steel.
Now, in general when one introduces steel into pickle accidentally, everything gets Cu plated instantly, and there is much cursing. Today? Nothin'. So I turned up the heat and left it a while, and fished it out- still nothin'. So then I fished out the steel... which now has a coat of copper on it. WTF????
So now I have both a thimble- used for forming and soldering my plique one- and a cotter pin, both with a funky copper coating that I'll have to burn off so solder won't stick to them... and perfectly silver solder seams on my star.
Ye gods.
I suppose I'll throw the star into the tumbler anyway, because the silver will be somewhat less visible when it's all shiny. And I'll ask J if he has some steel wool and try that. I saved a couple of cups of the dirty pickle when I changed it... Maybe I'll just throw some scrap Cu in it and see if I can get it even dirtier...
Amazing, really!
I know I said that I was not necessarily expecting the copper plating to go smoothly. Apparently my studio demons saw this as a challenge. :P
I have nice dirty pickle. I have my copper filigree with silver visible where the solder ran. I have various bits of cheap steel.
Now, in general when one introduces steel into pickle accidentally, everything gets Cu plated instantly, and there is much cursing. Today? Nothin'. So I turned up the heat and left it a while, and fished it out- still nothin'. So then I fished out the steel... which now has a coat of copper on it. WTF????
So now I have both a thimble- used for forming and soldering my plique one- and a cotter pin, both with a funky copper coating that I'll have to burn off so solder won't stick to them... and perfectly silver solder seams on my star.
Ye gods.
I suppose I'll throw the star into the tumbler anyway, because the silver will be somewhat less visible when it's all shiny. And I'll ask J if he has some steel wool and try that. I saved a couple of cups of the dirty pickle when I changed it... Maybe I'll just throw some scrap Cu in it and see if I can get it even dirtier...
Amazing, really!
Filigreed Monkey Paw Container!
Date: 2006-12-07 07:55 pm (UTC)As for how it's kept closed: there are two ribbons/strings attached to the main body: small rings, with the ribbon looped through that, with a knot on one end to prevent the ribbon from slipping. Those two ribbons are then tied together through a ring on the top of the part that slides out -- the video has a pretty good close-up of the ribbons untying.
If you want or need, I could take full-sized screenshots (which are larger than YouTube video size). Or we could arrange for you to get the clip in that larger format (or even the whole episode) if you still want to study it some more.
Re: Filigreed Monkey Paw Container!
Date: 2006-12-09 11:11 pm (UTC)This is really fascinating! Thanks again for telling me about it, and I'd love to do something based (loosely, probably) on the idea. It's very cool!