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2012 Tucson Show Update: Week 1

by Rose Marion, Wire-Sculpture.com

Tucson Show Update #1
January 27, 2012

Good morning from Tucson, where it’s expected to be 74° today and clear, sunny skies! I’m thrilled to be back here in Tucson for the world-famous gem, mineral, and fossil shows – usually at least 60 individual shows will be held during January and February! We arrived yesterday, and today is all about setting up our booth and classes area for our sister site, JewelryTools.com, who is hosting 120+ classes over the next couple weeks. I can’t wait to meet all the instructors and explore as many shows as I can!

We’re based out of Kino Sports Complex, at the Tucson Electric Park (TEP) Gem & Mineral Show. While the show doesn’t open until Saturday, when it will be free to the public (and free parking!), I thought I’d wander through the show while people set up their booths and show you what I found. Some vendors have been here for days or even weeks already, setting up their marvelous stock of gems! Take a look:

Assorted beads at tucson gem shows

Strands and strands and strands of gemstone beads at TEP Gem & Mineral Show - don't you just want to touch them?

Amethyst and citrine at Tucson gem Shows

One of the vendors here has a lot of citrine and amethyst! Since Dale wrote about them recently in her gem profiles, I made sure to get a few pictures. (Click to enlarge)

amethyst cathedrals at tucson electric park

Amethyst cathedrals waiting for the big day Saturday when the show opens!

citrine cathedral in tucson

A large citrine cathedral or geode - wouldn't that be an amazing display piece!

petrified wood in Tucson

The TEP Gem & Mineral Show had a lot of petrified wood to look at last year; this year it's a big thing again, too! These fossilized stumps are sure to be popular.

petrified wood slabs tucson shows

Here are more stumps and also slabs of petrified wood. This is just while the vendor was setting up - I will have to come back when the show starts and see if they have any cabbed or small pieces for me to play with in wire!

Quartz at tucson gem shows

Last but not least, I was just turning to leave when I saw these huge pure-white quartz crystals. Can you believe them!

We’ve got a busy day of setting up ahead of us, but I’ll be in touch again with LOTS more pictures and exciting gem & mineral updates from the show in the weeks to come!

Gem profiles by Dale “Cougar” Armstrong will resume after the Tucson shows.

By the way: there’s still time to discover the world of Jewelry-Making in terrific Tucson, Arizona! January 28 – February 12, choose from full-day and half-day classes that will transform your jewelry-making forever! In media including wire wrapping, beading, etching, resin, polymer clay, metal clay, chainmaille, and even more, just stop by JewelryTools.com’s Tool Tent #ES 14 at the TEP Gem & Mineral Show at Kino Sports Complex. Click here to browse all classes!

Take a Class at TEP in Tucson, Arizona!

Daily Wire Tip July 28: Making a Cuff Wire Bracelet

Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip for
July 28, 2011

Question:

I am trying to replicate a bracelet I saw at a show. It was a heavy-gauge wire or metal piece, bent in to a square shape (closed), and then a thin wire, threaded with beads, was wrapped around it. I’m trying to find out if I can buy the ready-made structures? Have you ever seen such a thing? I’ve been to dozens of sites, can’t find anything.

-Rebecca in Cincinnati, Ohio

Answer:

Rebecca, because most of the Wire Faculty and I make our own wire forms, I do not know if the manufactured shape you are looking for is available. I can tell you that is rather easy to make your own, though. Depending on the amount of beads, their weight and sizes, you can choose from either round or square wire in a gauge from 16 through 14 for the frame. To add the chosen beads, you can use about any round wire that will fit into the bead’s holes.

Cold Filligree Wide Cuff Bracelet

I did a nice DVD showing exactly how to create a cuff-style bracelet, this one includes handcrafting your own wire filigree and using a chasing hammer and a bench block for hardening and texturing the wire too. Here is a sample bracelet that can be made using Intermediate Series DVD 4.

Cold Filligree Wide Cuff Bracelet

Perhaps you would like to learn how to coil beads into a stunning bracelet? If so, then I recommend learning the Arabian Bracelet taught by Albina Manning on DVD 1 of her Coiling and Weaving Series (below).

Arabian Wire Bracelet by Albina Manning

No matter your decision Rebecca, remember that you can take the techniques taught in our DVD lessons, alter and or combine them, and create many new designs!

Answer contributed by Dale "Cougar" Armstrong

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Gem Profile May 20: Ruby Zoisite

Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip for
May 20, 2011

Ruby Zoisite

Cathy Whitten's Ruby Zoisite Necklace

A Closeup of Cathy Whitten's Ruby Zoisite Necklace

This week’s featured gem or rock is Ruby Zoisite. We chose this interesting stone after seeing the lovely necklace made by Cathy Whitten, our Wire Jewelry Artist of the Month. You can see pictures and read all about Cathy and her ruby zoisite necklace at our Featured Wire Artist of the Month: May 2011 page.

While deciding how to begin this article, the Shakespearean quotation, “A rose by any other name would smell as sweet” came to mind more than once; what matters is what something is, not what it is called. So let me explain some terminology briefly. As a rockhound who continuously studies mineralogy and geology, it is sometimes difficult for me to term something which I would call a “rock” as a gemstone. A “rock” is a combination of two or more minerals, and a “gemstone” is what the jewelry industry calls a specific mineral. There are also many “rocks” that have been accepted as gems due to their unique appearance. Some individuals call these rocks by the unscientific label “semi-precious”; I just call them “gem-rocks.” (“Semi-precious” refers to all stones excluding the traditional “precious” stones: diamond, ruby, sapphire, and emerald).

A very colorful material, ruby zoisite is a metamorphic gem-rock composed of at least three minerals:

Epidote Crystal Fan

Dark green Epidote Crystal Fan specimen from Peru. -Dale Armstrong, private collection.

corundum, epidote and tschermakite (more commonly known as hornblende). The various shades of apple green is chromiferous zoisite; the black and very dark green spots and striations are edenitic hornblende; and the lovely reddish pink is corundum (ruby). The geological name for African ruby-in-zoisite is Anyolite, from the Maasai native word for green.

 

 

Carved Ruby Zoisite Flowers

Flowers carved of Ruby Zoisite from Longico Mine, Tanzania, Africa. Notice the crystal structure on the bottom left flower (upside-down). -Dale Armstrong, private collection.

Ruby Zoisite was first discovered in Austria in 1805 and was named for Baron Sigmund Zois, the naturalist who identified the mineral composition as a new find in the mineralogy world. The better known east Africa deposits were first documented in 1904 by a German military commander and scholar who collected the material named after himself, “Merkerstein.” His work was never published and the location was lost. Around 1949, these “ruby-in-zoisite” deposits were rediscovered in Tanzania, mistakenly thought to be valuable for the ruby. With all three components being extremely dense metamorphic rocks, early miners found it impossible to profitably separate the ruby from the zoisite.

Although a very few gem quality rubies have been found, unshattered by its matrix, African Ruby Zoisite has gained popularity in the jewelry making industry, also known as Tanganyika Artstone. The majority of what we see on the market today comes from the Longido mine located at the foot of Mt. Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, Africa. Very plentiful, this ruby zoisite has a combined Mohs hardness of 5 to 7 and most of it takes a good polish.

Ruby Zoisite Pendant by Teresa McMahon

Ruby Zoisite Pendant by Teresa McMahon

The mineral Zoisite occurs in a variety of colors that include green, brown, pink, yellow, gray, colorless and shades of blue to violet. When natural zoisite is found in its reddish brown crystal state and it is artificially heated to bring out the violet and blues, it is named Tanzanite, rather than being called blue-zoisite. (We will talk more about Tanzanite at a later date.) Zoisite formations can be found in a variety of places around the globe including, but not limited to: Africa, Austria, India, Pakistan, Switzerland and the United States.

 

 

Rubies and Sapphires encased in Smaragdite

Rubies and Sapphires encased in Smaragdite from Mitchell Co, NC. -Dale Armstrong, private collection

Ruby zoisite is not a rare material, so there is no need to try to imitate it. However, we do need to be aware of two other gem-rocks that look similar and are often mislabeled. One similar gem-rock is from Mitchell County, North Carolina that is actually an emerald green form of actinolite, named smaragdite, with corundum, both red/pink and blue. Smaragdite can be difficult to polish because of the difference in the mineral hardness. The other material that is often mistaken for ruby zoisite is the subject of next week’s Gemstone Profile, yet another gem-rock called Ruby Fuchsite, when I will show you comparison photos of all three materials.

 

Resources

Book Resources:

  • Rocks, Gems, and Mineral Collecting Sites in Western North Carolina by Rick Jacquot Jr,
    ISBN-10: 1566642485, ISBN-13: 978-1566642484
  • Rubies & Sapphires (Fourth Edition) by Fred Ward, ISBN-10: 9781887651103, ISBN-13: 978-1887651103
  • Peterson Field Guide – Rocks and Minerals by Frederick H. Pough, ISBN-0-395-91096-X

Internet Resources:

Gem Profile by Dale “Cougar” Armstrong

Next Friday’s Gem Profile is on Ruby Fuchsite. Have you wire wrapped Ruby Fuchsite before? Send us pictures at tips@wire-sculpture.com and they could be featured!

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© 2011 wire-sculpture.com


 

Gem Profile May 13: Amber

Daily Wire Jewelry Making Tip for
May 13, 2011


Amber

Baltic Amber Earrings by Dale Cougar Armstrong

These earrings contain Baltic Amber (Dale "Cougar" Armstrong)

Our first gem profile is perfect for this time of year, when the sun finally starts to come out day after day. This sunny gem, Amber, actually comes in a variety of colors! Amber is a very soft material, scoring a maximum of a 3 on Mohs scale of hardness (some samples are as soft as a 1), so be especially careful with metal pliers when wrapping amber in wire. Burmese amber is among the hardest of ambers at a 3, Baltic is in the middle, and Dominican amber can be as low as 1 on Mohs scale. That’s because Dominican amber is the youngest – at 20 – 40 million years old!

The gem we call Amber is fossilized tree resin, often mistakenly called fossilized tree sap. The basic difference between these two organic materials is that sap is rather thin, composed of mostly water, and runs deeper in a tree, carrying all of the nutrients the tree needs to live. In contrast, thicker resin runs just under the bark of a tree, and acts as a healing agent should the tree become damaged, blocking any holes or scrapes to prevent fungal disease and/or bugs from entering the tree. Amber is one of few, true organic materials that classify as a gemstone: the others are pearls, certain shells like abalone, jet, ivory, and coral.

The earliest amber recorded thus far, is from the Carboniferous (coal-bearing) time period, about 320 Million years ago! This rare form of amber is kept for scientific research (so don’t go looking to purchase it). Amber is one of the oldest known materials used to make jewelry. Naturally it is found in a wide variety of colors, ranging from pale yellow to deep cherry red and in rare instances, blue and green! (Note-if you are looking for what is sometimes referred to as “Black Amber,” you really want jet, which is a form of coal.) To learn more basic facts about, and to view more amber samples (including Dominican, Baltic, Burmese, insect inclusions, etc) please enjoy this video: Let’s Talk About Amber!

Genuine Green Amber from Lithuania

Rare green amber from Lithuania, purchased in Moscow, Russia.

Amber Imitations

Copal: Being a semi-fossilized, natural hardened resin, copal is the most often used substitute as an inexpensive amber. Often sold as “young” or immature amber (being anywhere from 50 to 1.6 million years old) copal is unstable and liable to deteriorate over time, therefore it is a less suitable as a gemstone-like material. Copal is very valuable though, as it is widely used to make excellent varnish and believe it or not, in Mexico and Central America native Indians burn copal as incense during rituals. (Other popular incense “resins” include frankincense and myrrh.) The easiest way to test for copal vs. amber, is to put a drop of pure acetone in an inconspicuous place on the piece in question. Copal will become sticky very quickly whereas amber will not have any reaction. Beware of copal that is called by unusual names such as Caribbean amber, Chinese amber or Burmite, because copal can be chemically treated to change both the natural color as well as the hardness. Another type of copal that some try to pass for natural amber is called Kauri Gum, from New Zealand.

Vintage Plastics: Bakelite, Celluloid, and their varieties are valuable today because of the history attached to these materials. Mainly used in the 19th century through World War II, most of these early resins contained materials like wood, true amber shavings and rock particles along with unfavorable additions such as asbestos and formaldehydes. One of the names used for these amber counterfeits was “African Amber”. My new research on amber imitations also took me to a very interesting page about a vintage product called Faturan, a form of Bakelite that was used to carve prayer beads, until world-wide health implications combined with materials shortage due to World War II stopped the production of this fake amber material.

Synthetic Amber Cabochon

Synthetic Amber Cabochon made from Resin and Amber Flakes

Modern Plastics: Polyester, Epoxy Resins, and Plexiglas are often made to look like amber. Sometimes copal is covered with an epoxy resin to harden the immature fossil and other times the shavings, chips and broken pieces of real amber are mixed with the resin to form the products known as “pressed” amber and reconstituted or reconstructed amber. Note: “Amberlite™” is not actually an imitation of amber but rather the trademarked name for a type of resin/ion-exchange product developed to remove impurities from water and other substances in the biopharmaceutical industry.

Glass: Although much heavier, cold and more shiny and transparent than natural amber, some vendors still try to pass off glass/silica as amber.

Traditions with Amber

There are many myths, legends and stories associated with amber. With regards to metaphysical properties, it is most often used to stimulate intellect by opening Sahasrara, the crown chakra. The many natural colors of amber can be also used on the appropriate chakras according to their color. Basically, amber is used as a cleansing stone for both the mind and the body.

Tumble-polished, freeform amber from the Dominican Republic.

Tumble-polished, freeform amber from the Dominican Republic.

In the Old Testament, amber is said to have been one of the 12 stones in the breastplate of the high priest, Aaron (Exodus 28:15-20). Some theorize that amber is the first stone in the third row, called “ligure”, representing the presence and glory of God in judgment, purification and sanctification.

Prayer beads and rosaries are often made of amber due to the fact that rubbing amber produces warmth and static electricity, both of which are thought to be beneficial to human health, especially while meditating.

Real or Fake?

I have grown up knowing about and using the hardness, hot needle, salt water and acetone tests. For instance, in the hot needle test, you heat a needle in a flame until it glows, then push the tip into the piece of “amber” you wish to examine. Amber will release sooty fumes, while copal releases a fragrant odor and melts the piece faster. Of course, this should be done on an inconspicuous part of the piece in question!

Although no test is absolutely conclusive, if you have a piece of amber that you think could be very old, real and therefore very expensive, I recommend sending it to an amber expert for proper identification. If you’d like detailed information on each kind of amber authenticity test, here is a page that covers all of them: Amber Tests.

Common Dominican amber with termites.

Common Dominican amber with termites.

Finally, if you would like even more information on Amber, I would like to direct your attention to this very complete article, Amber, because it already has all of the information I would normally write for you.

In closing, when purchasing amber, often common sense will guide you; if a truly lovely, large piece of amber is glass clear, with or without bugs, and is priced unbelievably low – it probably is a counterfeit.

Resources

Book Resources:

  • Simon & Schuster’s Guide to Gems and Precious Stones, ISBN 0-671-60430-9
  • Gemstones of the World, by Walter Schumann, ISBN 0-8069-3088-8
  • Love Is In The Earth, by Melody, ISBN 0-9628190-3-4
  • The Book of Stones & Metals, by Maya Heath, ISBN 0-9651554-2-0

Internet Resources:

Gem Profile by Dale “Cougar” Armstrong

Baltic Amber Cabochon Amber Beads
Shop Amber Cabochons Shop Amber Beads

Next Friday’s Gem Profile is on Ruby Zoisite. Have you wire wrapped Ruby Zoisite before? Send us pictures at tips@wire-sculpture.com and they could be featured!

Click to Receive Daily Tips by Email

© wire-sculpture.com


 

Daily Wire Tip Apr. 23: I Need Your Help!

Hi everyone,

Confession time.

Steaming, Hot Coffee

No More Grounds

I was drinking my morning coffee yesterday, trying to find a good Tip for this morning, but I just couldn’t do it. It wasn’t the coffee’s fault; the coffee was perfect – a special treat, some beans roasted in Washington state that my friend sent as a gift. Here was my problem: I was staring at a page full of questions that I just couldn’t publish. Thinking about the Tips as a cup of coffee, I’d already enjoyed the whole mug, and all I had left were the grounds.

I know I’ve been sending you a Daily Tip every day for a while now. And even though they were really interesting and helpful for a while, lately you’ve probably just been skimming them and then deleting them.

Here’s why: for the last few years, people were asking us questions right and left! We were flooded by curious minds asking questions about wire working techniques, sales ideas, and even asking lapidary and rockhounding questions. But in the last few months, that flood of questions has nearly petered out – only a few questions trickle in a week, if that – and many times, they’re not even related to wire jewelry. I know I need to change something – I need to make the Tip of the Day better.

Here’s Where You Come In

I’m asking for your help. Think about it: What do you want to see in the Tip of the Day? Or better yet, what questions do you have for Dale Armstrong or other members of the Wire-Sculpture team?

Many people have written in to me, telling me they read the Tip of the Day with their morning coffee. I am so honored that you allow Dale and me into your inbox every morning. Please tell me how I can make our morning time together more enjoyable and interesting for you!

How to Help Us Out

There are 3 ways you can help me by sending me your suggestions and Tip of the Day questions:

  1. Use the “Ask a Question” form on our website
  2. Call our Customer Service number: 1-877-636-0608
  3. Or New: Send an email to tips@wire-sculpture.com

If you have a couple (or more) questions you’d like to ask Dale, me, or one of our staff members, please send them in! If you don’t have any questions now, just let me know what topics you like reading about. For example, personally, I really enjoy reading information about the different gemstones and minerals, because I don’t have that background like Dale does – I really do learn something new every time I ask her about rocks! (We had a great time together in Tucson, as she introduced me to dozens of stones I’d never seen – amazing!) But that’s me – what do you love reading about? Let me know at tips@wire-sculpture.com.

I’ll Only Send You Tips if You Want Them

And one more thing – If you ever decide you would like to stop receiving emails from me, it’s very easy. Look at the bottom of every email from me: there will always be the words “Change Your Email Preferences” and a link called “Click here to unsubscribe from all emails.” When you click that link, we will ask you to confirm, and then remove your email from our email list. If you would just like to stop receiving one email series, though – for example, the Daily Deals, and you’d like to continue receiving Tips, please call us at 1-877-636-0608 or reply to this email with what you’d like, and we will take care of it for you!

Email Me

Thank you for taking the time to read this email. Again, please send me an email at tips@wire-sculpture.com with your suggestions on how to make the Tip of the Day better for you – as well as any questions about making or selling wire worked jewelry. We’re here for you!

Best Wishes,
Rose Marion
Wire-Sculpture.com

P.S. For the caffeine-inclined: If you were wondering, the coffee that my friend sent me is by Craven’s Coffee, specifically the Eastern Washington University Eagles Blend – I highly recommend it; it has served me well for many years, as it has as countless other E.W.U. alumni. What’s your favorite coffee?

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