Silversmithing advanced class...spinner rings
So this was the most fun!!!!Remember when I took the basic silversmithing course a few weeks ago?Remember I told you I would be a repeat offender in Walt's class?Well, guess what? Walt decided to hold a spinner ring class with slightly more advanced techniques and I jumped at the chance.Do you know spinner rings? Fun, fat rings with an outside ring which can spin freely around the inner ring. So lovely, so handy when you're nervous, so dress up unusual when everyone is wearing plain old "rings"...so what I have to make right now. (Below are a couple Walt made for demonstration.)But you know me...I'm so not colouring within the lines, by the way...lol.So come see how these are made, it's not too hard, I promise. But I would still recommend a class before you try any silversmithing on your own and, if you're in the Lower Mainland, you can't do better than Walt's almost one-on-one, private studio classes, and, he's running a basic class in a week or two again.So this ring needs a thicker inner ring which means I got to design, measure and cut out a custom sized piece of silver.Silver is pretty easy to cut out using these metal cutting shears at this stage, so a saw isn't necessary for this step.Next, that whole palaver of adjusting the ends so they fit completely smoothly and snugly begins with endless filing.Remember, if you decide to become a silversnmith, it's useful to say, "I love filing...filing is my friend!" over and over again. You can also see how badly I cut this piece of silver with one end slightly wider than the other. You guessed it...more filing. :DI'm skipping over the basic flux and solder of the inner ring...you can refer to the earlier post...but let's just say that after the ring is filed and soldered and in the "pickle", it's time to begin work on the outer ring, which will spin around the inner ring.Now let me tell you why Walt is one in a million.I think I said something like, "Walt, I'd like to make a wavy branch and have a jewel on that branch in a bezel, kind of like a flower, and I'd like some leaves and maybe a bird on that branch, and I know that this class will finish by 4:30pm and I know that this means hours of custom work which I don't know anything about, and I also want to make a second spinner ring for Clove, which I haven't even designed yet but it won't be simple,...but it's what I really want."And Walt said, "sure, go ahead!" And then! He encouraged me in my crazy designs and showed me short-cut techniques and introduced me to new tools.So my outer ring began with a length of silver wire. I cut it to two sizes larger than my inner ring size and, after soldering it together, I bent it into a wavy pattern. Then I filed a smooth spot on the branch and soldered the bezel cup to it.Next I thought about the leaves. I took a little piece of silver, drew three leaves with a sharpie and cut them out with my saw. Then filed them smooth and to the irregular shape I wanted, and used a heavy sort of screwdriver thing and my rawhide hammer to make the leaf veins on the leaves. You can see by the tip of my finger just how tiny these leaves are.Then I took the edge of a thicker gauge sheet of silver and drew a tiny bird on it and cut it out with my saw.Then the nightmare of soldering all those bits on my "branch" outer ring began. Whew, they took a fair few tries to get that straight remembering to use the solder in the hard, medium, easy and extra easy steps so not to melt the previous soldered piece with each subsequent heat-up and solder.From such humble beginnings as scrap bits of silver to fitting the little carnelian gem took hours but I was so proud to be using the burnishing tool and doing that almost final step of fitting the gem.The very last step to my ring involved slipping the outer ring over the inner ring and gently hitting the ends of the inner ring with a ball-shaped tool to spread them out and keep the outer ring trapped on the band of the inner ring. I'm sorry but I was so excited to do this that I forgot to take a photo. :( My bad.For C's ring I wanted to make her a tree. Not just any tree, a tall, majestic and slim sitka spruce. Walt suggested I learn a new technique or sawing inside a bar of silver, like lace, or cut work. I knew the minute he said that, that this would be the best ring for C. The way to do this is by using this new tool to make a small hole thru the silver and then treading the saw blade thru the hole and gently sawing out the tree shape.So C's ring began the same way with a bespoke inner ring, a bar of silver, shaped, filed and soldered together, filed some more and polished, and the outer ring began the same way as the inner, with a bespoke bar of silver, slightly narrower than the outer ring, shaped to make sure the size was correct and then flattened out again.As with everything, practice makes...well...a better mess the second time than the time before, and after a prototype on some copper, the bar of silver was relatively easy, even if very time consuming. (by the way, filing silver must be a good work out for your upper arms because mine are killing me!)I got home around supper time and gave C her ring and showed her mine. She absolutely loved them both and immediately gave me a big hug and Instagramed it. LOL. I'll take more photos in the day time so you can see the rings better but if you have any questions at all I'll very happily find answers for you.Oh, and by the way, C has asked for a sitka spruce necklace now...lol. A mother's work is never done. :DSharing with Mary at the Little Red House and with Create with Joy and Amaze me Monday