Sunday, December 28, 2014

I think this tree is proof that I can make anything you can think of.  A friend of mine had a dream in which there was a tree with clear quartz leaves, a vertebra in the trunk, a red stone in the vertebra (it is actually garnet), and sitting on an obsidian - so here it is.  I think it is the strangest tree I've ever made . . .


Saturday, December 20, 2014

Here is an opal I just finished cutting - it is a little guy so it is still on its dop so it is easier for me to move it around for the video.  Dops are little pieces of wood or metal that are attached to a stone to make it easier to hold while cutting.  We have had no sun around here lately, so I improvised with a reptile light.  Opals are terrible to try to take pictures and videos of - but this one has a lot of good orange in it that is really not showing up on video.


Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Sometimes people give me little pieces of jewelry that are broken or have lost their mates - I made this tree with kitties climbing in it at a cat show using an earring that had lost its mate.  A different cat can be seen from each direction.



Thursday, December 11, 2014

Here is a little Zuni owl fetish that I set up flying over a piece of selenite - I think it came out pretty nice . . .



Monday, December 8, 2014

I have been working on this elk forever - he came from a friend of mine who hunts for meat but thought it would be cool to have a European mount of one of his elk since I do them.  I'm very picky about why people hunt as I'm not a fan of trophy hunting.  However, I think hunting for meat is more humane than buying factory farmed meat, so I have no problems working with hunters who eat the animals they kill.

General shots of the skull:







Lower jaw, atlas vertebra, half of the axis vertebra, and larynx bone





Then this is a bit of taxidermy porn - if you are ever going to pay A LOT of money for a skull ask for these two shots - it will tell you how skilled the person who preserved the skull is.  The nasal bones and sinuses are extremely delicate and hard to preserve:

Nasal bones:



Rear sinuses:


Here is a tree that I'm going to put in the cat show this weekend - here is a link to the show if you want to come (I'll also be vending)

http://www.ticamembers.org/calendar/141213c.htm


Friday, December 5, 2014

We finally had a little sun today so I took some pictures of my most recent trees:

The Willow




The Cherry Tree (which is a special order but I can duplicate something like it)



A crystal tree:



A fall tree:


This is late notice but I'll be at the Burleson Senior Center at a craft show on Saturday (a friend is putting it on - she swears to me that it gets a lot of traffic - Burleson is a small place so I sort of believe it) . . . it is from 9am to 1pm at 216 SW Johnson Ave, Burleson, TX 76028

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

I had a busy weekend this weekend working at a craft show - I created a weeping willow tree that I will post a picture of as soon as we have some sun - it is an amazing piece

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

I went to the Dallas Gem and Mineral show this weekend and got TONS of cool bases for trees.  This particular tree is on a drusy quartz (most of the drusy is in the middle but you can see some of it in this picture).  This one is a raffle prize for the cat show I'm going to this weekend.


Monday, November 24, 2014

These two pictures really illustrate why I have to ask a lot of questions before I make trees - these are both 'green and blue trees on a simple base with gold wire'

This first one is malachite and lapis - it is what I would call a solid stone tree . . .



The second one is prehenite, chalcedony, yellow jade, kyanite, and peridot - it is what I would call a crystal tree - meaning that most of the stones are clear


Thursday, November 20, 2014

Here are gem trees in their larval and adult form.  This color combination works for some reason - I was unsure of it when I came up with the idea but I really like the contrasting colors.




Close up of the big tree . . .


Here is an abalone tree pendant I made as a special order.  I cheated a little - I told the lady that ordered it I would cut the stone, but then I found out that abalone produces toxic dust, so I just bought one . . . the piece still came out pretty though.


Wednesday, November 19, 2014

We have a great sign now!  I'm amazed the artist was able to make the tiger so detailed - I literally sent him the picture and said 'I want something like this - I know it is a lot of detail for a fairly small sign' but it literally looks like a photograph.  The artist is martypants on etsy or www.facebook.com/martypantsmerchants


Today I'm going to tell you all about opals.  Opals are my favorite stone and I sometimes find a piece of rough that is so nice (and generally shaped in a way that would mean I'd lose A LOT of it when I cut it) that I just free form wrap it.  I recently got three different types of opal that I did that with so I thought I'd tell you guys about them.  I finally decided video was the only way to really show you what these stones look like.  In fact, if you are going to buy a special and/or very expensive opal ask for video.  With the right angle someone could light up an opal with very little fire and you'd be disappointed when you got it.

Admit it, when you think opal you think this:


Not a bad few stones at all but sort of milky white and with a little flash

Here is one that I particularly like that is the same kind - these come from Australia and are the most common and therefore the cheapest.  I just think this guy looks neat in rough form so that is the way he's gonna stay . . .


You can see, white with some pretty flashes - but look at this one.  This is also from Australia but it is only mined in one area - it is called boulder opal and is actually my favorite kind of opal . . . I've heard they are going to stop exporting it so I've bought a ton of rough recently.


Then this last one is just stunning - I can't imagine wasting one cut on it - it amazes me every time I look at it.  This is a good sized hunk of welo opal from Ethiopia.  I can't remember exactly what I paid for this guy but I know it was a hunk.  They have actually stopped exporting the rough welos now because they have figured out that they can make more money for their country selling only to authorized dealers and even then almost always cut stones.


So you can see there is quite a bit more to this stone than just the little white ones you see in commercial stores.  I haven't even included black opal or fairy opal or Mexican opal!



Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Since all my claws are antiques I tend to buy them in lots - and in lots you get varying quality.  These lion's claws are not of a quality I feel like I can sell but I went ahead and made them up for raffle prizes for the cat club I'm part of.  I bet someone will really like them.


Here are more alligator teeth.  I was trying to figure out something to do with the half ones and I think having the stones to the side looks pretty neat . . .


Thursday, November 13, 2014

Boulder opal is my favorite stone - bar none.  I have some others that I like a lot but none as much as boulder opal.  Boulder opal is only mined in one area of Australia and is basically opal that has grown into cracks and crevices of larger rocks, often iron or just plain stone.

A gem buyer friend of mine said it is going to get harder and harder to get so I had to buy some extra.  I find that it is really hard to photograph, so I gave it its best chance of showing you how pretty it is by getting it wet and putting it in the direct sun (which we have had very little of for the last few days).  When it is wet and in the sun it looks a whole lot like it will when it is finished.

Here are all my pieces:



Here are the best ones - can't you just see little universes and worlds in each of those little rivers of opal?





This little bird and I have a complex relationship.  He was brought to me after he was killed by a friend's cat (cats get me a lot of the birds I work with).  But this little guy was different - he had this LOOK on his face.  I tell people he looked like he was lecturing the cat about karma when he died.  I took a picture of the look for myself, but I'm not going to post it here since some people get upset by that sort of thing.  However, I want to show you all the finished piece.  I thought this brave little bird deserved to have brightly colored wings (made of parrot feathers), a rose quartz heart, blue diamond chips on his beak, and welo opal beads on his head.  I honestly don't plan to sell this little guy but I'm super proud of him . . .

Here he is from every angle possible:






And a few detail shots for people who work with bones - I was able to preserve his little trachea:



And then his little rose quartz heart:


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

This weekend went really well - I sold one of my most expensive bear claws to a lady with a bear totem.  The money is always nice but it is even better to put a totem piece in the hands of someone who will appreciate it.

Becky also talked me into doing a new kind of tree - the pictures are not great because it sold pretty much immediately after I made it - these pictures are on the cat show benching space of the person who bought it.  I plan to do a weeping willow in the same style soon.




Wednesday, November 5, 2014

I was hoping to get some sun today to take pictures - but no luck.  Since I plan to sell these pieces this weekend I wanted to get pictures taken and posted even if they aren't the best.

Here are some lion's claws:



Different sizes of bear claws:


Alligator teeth (we think):


Wolf teeth:


A racoon scapula pendant:

Monday, November 3, 2014

My dermestid beetles got a long overdue home upgrade today!  They also got a whole pack of hot
dogs since I don't have anything dead to feed them right now - so I assume they are about as happy as a bunch of flesh eating beetles can be!

This tree is a new thing for me - I've never used abalone shell before.  I tried to choose a base and other stones that would set off colors in the abalone - I think it came out pretty good!


Here are some more parrot feather pendants - in addition to having no sun we also have a lot of wind today so these had to be taken in the shade . . . parrot feathers have quite a bit more color than this picture shows . . .


For some reason, when I work with bones from time to time pieces will stay articulated (meaning the bones stay connected like they would have in a live animal) - they go through a lot in the cleaning process so when that happens I try to leave them together - this is the upper part of that same raccoon's paw . . .


I decided to do a few tooth an claw pieces to sell at the cat show - the first one is a wolf claw with a chicken feather and the second one is a bear claw with turquoise . . . I love how the angle of the feather goes with the angle of the wolf claw -  I actually wasn't going to add a feather to that piece until I saw it laying on my work area and realized they had the same angle



Well, I was busy last night - here are some buffalo teeth I did - I really like the way they came out . . . I wish there was sun for pictures but you can't have everything  . ..