Bead Chat Magazine Winter 2014 | Page 91

It seems that chain maille is something that runs in the family. Patti says that a chain maille necklace that her mother made for her was the piece that initially inspired her to finally jump in and start making jewelry herself. Patti was exposed to all kinds of jewelry making techniques by her mother. “When my parents retired decades ago, they moved to a retirement community in Florida that was tailored to an active lifestyle and offered many, many crafts and activities: woodworking, ceramics, painting, and most importantly, lapidary. My mother joined the ceramics and lapidary clubs. Everything she ever created was in multiples, so that her daughters, daughter-in-laws, granddaughters, etc. had options when choosing the perfect piece of jewelry! I marveled at each new technique that my mother mastered. After years of watching her create, it finally rubbed off on me.” She says that she’s been working with metal now for about 7 years, and like most of us we shudder just a bit at the thought of those first couple of attempts when we started out “I am not sure that what I made in the beginning could be classified as jewelry, it was so bad!” So I asked her if there was a technique that was particularly hard, that needed more practice? “Every technique took time and practice! When I look back on images of the first jewelry I made, I shudder at my wrapped loops! Not only were the loops not round, but the tool marks left in the metal were awful! But, the technique that has taken the longest to learn – and I am still in that learning stage – is soldering. Heating the metal at the right temperature and finally seeing that solder get shiny and flow is a euphoria that is indescribable! It took me a full year to perfect just soldering a jump ring – too much solder, not enough solder, too much heat, not enough heat, not enough flux, jump ring was not flush, etc. I would get so flustered and discouraged that I would put it down and not pick it up for a full month. One day, it just finally clicked. I still make tons of mistakes, but the journey is much more enjoyable now that I have come to understand the relationship of the flame and the heat it produces to how reacts with a particular metal.” So what technique is next for Patti? “In addition to perfect my soldering techniques (this is ongoing!), I really want to try anticlastic raising – curving metal. I truly get goose bumps when I see a piece a metal that has been shaped with flowing curves. I have also been thinking about trying precious metal clay. I have purchased a few good resource books and watched quite a few videos and am totally in awe of these processes.” creativebeadchat.com