New for Talisman Studios! Artisan Jewelry in Sterling Silver

Sterling Silver Pendant with Hand Stamped Detail, and Deschutes Jasper Cabochon

Though I’ve been practicing the art of silversmithing only since January, I can’t believe it’s taken me this long to make a progress report on my blog – nearly a year after starting!

In fact, the very last post I made was just after I’d finished my first piece, shown below. This was the “class project” inn the only workshop I’ve yet taken, but it actually turned out very well, considering I really had little idea as to what I was doing. The stone is an Owyhee Jasper cabochon which I personally cut and polished.

As you may remember, I’ve spent the last few winters in Quartzsite, Arizona, working my lapidary skills in the local Quartzsite Roadrunners Gem & Mineral Club. That was where I took the step to take an introductory class in silversmithing, where I learned to foundational basics.

Then I headed to Tucson for the gem shows, and when it was time to return to Quartzsite and further practice silversmithing in their well-equipped metalsmithing shop, I found myself flummoxed…. I wanted to delve into metalsmithing, but the thought of going back to the town of Quartzsite for two month filled me with dread. If only the town had a decent bagel shop, I’d have been able to do it…… Oh, and public wifi and places to charge electronics, among a few other things. The two things, for me, that Quartzsite has going for it is the easy camping on BM land, and the gem club. Everything else….. it’s fine for a few weeks, but month after month is depressing. Especially after having done the winter seasons there for the five years I’d already done.

Instead, I stayed in Tucson, hoping to find some metalsmithing classes there. Unfortunately, I have a beer budget…cheap swill beer. I did locate the Old Pueblo Lapidary Club, which was within my ability to do, but unfortunately there were no classes to be offered while I was there.

I tried not to be hard on myself for not returning to Quartzsite, and have to admit I had a fear that I was subconsciously sabotaging myself. I believed that I truly wanted to develop my skills as a metalsmith, yet there I was – passing up the opportunity I knew was available.

“Self-teaching it is,” I told myself, and off I went to Kent’s Tools to purchase the basic tools….

Let me just interrupt this story to say this: If you are considering metalsmithing, and someone tells you that you “really only need,”…. do.not.believe.them. You will quickly realize you may not need anything beyond a few things like solder, a small torch, pliers and metal stock, but you will need them if you want to employ any creativity in your pieces.

But, back to my journey(which included several return trips to Kents, and an investment of easily a thousand dollars in materials and supplies over the last eight months.

Sterling Silver Pendant with a Succor Creek Jasper Stone

Working with a cold pickle pot, and what I came to find out was a defective torch, on my folding desk table out in open air was….a challenge. A frustrating effort that nearly did me in as I ruined silver every time I tried to make something. At $23 an ounce(price on day of this post), it hurt to waste like this, and though I know it can be remelted and recylced, that’s not the point.

Once I got back to my home base here in New York, I quickly set up my studio space to include a section for smithing, and got to work. It has been so much fun, at least since I crossed the line from frustration into understanding on the basic fabrication concepts.

Nonetheless, there is a LOT to learn, and I’m old enough that I will never become a master metalsmith, at least in this life.

Accepting that fact, I’m developing well enough that I am(or should be) happy with my progress. In less than a month, I’ll be doing my winter travels, and the plan is to base myself out of Tucson, so I can utilize the metal shop this winter. If I get lucky and they offer the silversmithing class while I’m there, I hope I can afford to take it, as I would love to have a better mentor than myself…..

Dead Ringer Jasper Sterling Silver Pendant

My style is simple, as I want my stones to be the focal point. That doesn’t mean the work is easy. Silversmithing is a precision craft, and jewelry is very small. The use of magnification is essential, especially with my aging eyesight. Cutting and filing also requires diligence, as one pull of the saw, or one misplaced file sweep, can mean I have an error that I’ll need to make up for somehow. Better to pay attention and not cause the problem in the first place!

I’m still struggling with being able to stay focused and intentional as I go, and I don’t yet have the optical magnification tools that would be optimal. I use reader glasses, and I have one desk lamp that has a magnifier lens I can look through, but I really need a higher magnification level. I’m wishing for Craftoptics glasses, but may need to make do with the less costly Optivisor, but up til now I’ve just made do. This goes back to not believing anyone who tells you that you can do silversmithing with just a few items……

One of the techniques I’m currently struggling with is stamping. I do like the idea of incorporating the motifs and patterns into my work, and have purchased a few stamps so far from House of Stamps and K2Stamps. These are artisan made stamps, crafted by hand and not factory-produced. They are not inexpensive…. and once you own a few stamps, you realize you’ve now opened Pandora’s Box and want more, more, more!

Sterling Silver Pendant Featuring Owyhee Jasper Stone

Stamping is not as simple as one might think. I’m sure it will become easier with practice, but getting the stamped properly positioned before striking it with a two pound brass mallet is a delicate maneuver. To properly produce the effect, repeated blows to the stamp are needed, and the stamp angle often needs reorienting(while maintaining the exact position of the stamp head where it meets the metal) to create the full impression. When creating a pattern of stamps, which is nearly always the case, things become more complex.

I’ve gotten a fairly good amount of pendants finished by now, and would appreciate you’re taking the time to browse the current selection, at Talisman Studios. Each of the images in this post also takes you directly to the listing when you click on the picture.

Deschutes Jasper Cabochon in an Artisan Crafted Sterling Silver Setting

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?