Browsing Category

multipurposing

How to make interchangeable magnetic jewelry with 1" buttons

March 24, 2011

bottle cap magnet button pendantHandmade magnetic bottle cap necklace with assorted buttons
Mollie has been borderline obsessed with one particular item lately. It’s not a pretty gemstone bead or sparkly crystal pendant. It isn’t even new. No, Mollie is obsessed with plain old sticky dots. Almost daily, she’d ask me, “Oooh, have you tried the sticky dot?” and I’d just roll my eyes. But now I’m a convert too.
Sticky dots are just that – self-stick little glue pads. Easy to use, strong, zero mess, no fuss, no cure time, no smell. This is true instant gratification!


Round sticky dots fit perfectly under our magnets!

Two of Mollie’s recent designs use the sticky dot: the interchangeable magnet ring and the interchangeable magnet bottle cap pendant. Like many of you crafty people, Mollie has a button making machine. The little 1″ buttons are particularly adorable, and since they are made of steel, naturally they are magnetic. I don’t have a button machine myself, but I buy lots of buttons – and now I can wear them instead of leaving them on my bulletin board!

Here’s the magnet

Here’s the pendant – so cute!

Rings & Things’ wholesale price breaks makes it really affordable to make a whole bunch of these necklaces. For about $50 (before shipping and tax, if applicable) you can get everything (except the buttons) to make 70 necklaces – with supplies leftover! If you don’t already have one, add a pair of EuroPunch pliers to make holes in the caps.

1 spool of ball chain (makes 70 17″ necklaces) $18-25 ~ 100 ball chain clasps $2 ~ 1 oz. jump rings $5-6 ~ 100 bottle caps $7-10 ~ 144 adhesive dots $6 ~ two packs of 35 magnets $12-14

The adhesive dot is completely hidden by the ring and magnet.

1″ buttons make perfect rings!

The same value applies to the magnetic ring design – and absolutely no tools are required to make these!

72 adjustable flat-pad ring blanks $42-62, depending on color (we do sell a less expensive ring blank if you prefer, but the style and comfort of this style is worth the added cost) ~ 144 adhesive dots $6 ~ two packs of 35 magnets $12-14

At these quantities, the necklaces cost less than a dollar and the rings about $1.20 to 1.50 each to make. Buy more and the cost per is even lower. Ah, the genius of good design! ~ Cindy

“Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler.”
~ Albert Einstein


PS: here are some handy links to some other how-to’s in the Rings & Things blog!

Cheapskate booth ideas

November 19, 2010

Ever do craft / trade shows? Wendy Rosen is going to save you some money. And hassle!

Cheapskate Booth Ideas

Cheapskate booth ideas from Wendy Rosen: music stands

Music stands!

Cheapskate-booth-ideas-Wendy-Rosen-dioder-lights

Under-shelf lights!

Cheapskate-booth-ideas-Wendy-Rosen-JoAnns-cutting-table

Cutting table from JoAnn Fabrics!

See 20 Cheapskate Booth Ideas (and more) at Wendy’s Facebook page! ….Please note that if you become Wendy’s “FB friend”, you’ll receive more booth ideas, plus tips about wholesaling to shops and galleries!

PS: for extra ideas, check out Tradeshow Stuff and The Buyers Market!

Make hay with bail-making pliers

August 26, 2010

Tip: Use bail-making pliers for more than just bails! Here’s how:

Bailing pliers make swell roundish shapes. Ear wires are roundish. So…whip out the Wubbers for more than just bails!

PS: Bail pliers also make nice jump rings and more! This is one tool that makes lots of custom findings…so make hay with your bailer 🙂

Giveaway! What's your best crafts tip?

February 17, 2010

While R&T’s online store is down for a bit, getting upgraded today, I’m making us useful…Let’s have a giveaway!

Thanks to Making Jewellery magazine out of the UK, for sending me a beautiful promo copy of their new March 2010 issue. Inside the plastic wrap it includes an 86-piece jewelry kit. All of this can be yours in today’s drawing. Just Tweet/FB/comment below with your favorite crafts tip!

You could win this magazine!

Here are the entries, live-blogged (need I point out, you should follow these Tweeters & Facebookers):

  • idolyzer my tip – don’t let the cats near your beading…. seriously 😉
  • swimmer_chick Use empty medicine bottles for bead storage- easy to label and see what’s inside!
  • Clayshion tip: when smoothing out polymer clay, dip your finger in water and rub your finger lightly over the project. Takes out prints.
  • Elaine Carroll Embree To finish a stretchy bracelet, I use a grill lighter to heat up my flat-nosed pliers and press firmly on the knot. This makes the knot much more stable.
  • Julia Grosz For my fellow math dyslexics: use a popsicle stick to mark the length of wire needed for a link or piece to keep them all uniform. For those without a jump ring mandrel, coat your round nose pliers in R&T’s Tool Magic and use different color sharpies to mark where to bend for consistently-sized loops.
  • MABJewelry tip: Beaders, plastic bowl lids make great little bead trays. Just fold to repour beads back into bags or tubes.
  • Priscilla Hennen well I don’t know if this is the BEST tip, but it’s one i’ve used recently. 🙂 when making polymer clay bangles, a soda can is the perfect size/shape for curing them on!
  • all_about_savin Type up directions and place in a 3 ring binder with finished pictures. Separate by occasion. Easy reference tool.
  • silentgoddess -When needing a tight soldering joint, I use the edge of my bench block to file stock even & straight. Perfect fit each time.
  • makeupkat1959 I use a thread spool holder hung on the wall to sort my bead strands
  • Katherine Gibson James I love using scraps from other projects-scrapbook paper especially. you can make wall art, lamp shades, wrapping paper, cute covers for book ect..
  • jessicaleap if out of storage containers for beads, you can use a devilled egg dish to hold beads 🙂
  • lanieekat I save old 35mm film canisters for storage of all things small and crafty. They are perfect 4 beads
  • justicejewelry Candy boxes, like whitmans, & valentines hearts, ones with plastic inserts for individual cholates, are great 4 sorting beads!
  • Deb Gilchrist The plastic, resealable baby food containers are the perfect size for organizing smaller beads and findings – see-through and stackable.
  • HerArtSheLoves I use clay softer and gloves, then I feel like I’m in of those of CSI type shows.
  • Karen Potter Naylor One of my favorite tips for organizing bead projects…I scoured thrift stores and bought all of the MINI muffin pans I could find. They were about $.25 ea and I spray painted them white, let them dry and then I use them for projects with lots of parts & possibilities: clasps, head pins, cute wire, beads, charms, jump rings etc. and even better, they stack on top of each other! When i am ready for a particular project I just get the pan and a beading mat and I am ready to go….Another design tip: I also look at wallpaper patterns, paint chips with fun finishes to inspire me. I get a lot of ideas from looking at furniture decorating and fashion magazines… I cut the pics out when I can, put them into a document protector inside a notebook and when I am lacking a creative idea, I just pull those things out and look at them… Not to copy but to get the creative neurons firing again by looking at things I love.
  • MelanDesigns Always carry a digital camera and small sketch notebook! When something inspires you take notes, sketch it or snap a picture!
  • Miz Fit Leather – leather is the greatest asset to any jewelry makers inventory. It is the universal element, creating great jewelry for males and females. You can make fun bulky designs by braiding it, or use it to display a simple pendant. Why limit your customer base to just female customers, open up your designs to anyone!
  • murphygracehome I put a white cloth on the table while beading.Not only does it make the beads that I drop easier to find, they don’t roll!
  • Alison Nappi My secret to making the perfectly shaped earwire is a pen! 1. Cut the wire to length (I use about 2″ of wire) 2. Debur one end and make a loop at the other 3. Slide the looped end under the pen cap (make sure the loop doesn’t lay flat against the pen. It should lay perpendicular to the pen) 4. Hold the “tail” of the pen cap and bend the wire around the pen. 5. Bend the deburred end of the earwire slightly 6. Make any ajustments (if needed) and vuala! the perfectly shaped earwire!
  • glitz_glitter Baking soda is perfect for polishing your oxidized silver. It is easy to clean up, and leaves the silver with a lovely sheen
  • Janeen Sorensen I hope this will count, but my tip is that I utilize my local library! I check out books on techniques that are new to me, and use them for inspiration and to expand my design capabilities. It’s a free way to challenge yourself to be a better and more wide-ranged designer.
  • leahmichon I use argentium silver and fuse it instead of soldering – this way, no harmful chemicals from flux or pickle.
  • Nesrin Akdemir If you’re working on a project(s) that needs multiple pieces of chain that all have to be the same length. I’ve found for me the fastest way to do it is to measure and cut 1 piece of chain, string it onto a long headpin. Then string one end of your spool of chain onto the same headpin, hold the headpin up and measure and cut it the second piece using the first one as your guid, and repeat as many times as you need. I hope that made sense. It saves me a lot of time.
  • yay4renee tip: don’t be afraid to think outside the box and explore different possibilities.
  • Latisha Leppert I hope this counts as a tip…it is more in dealing with the creative process…When trying to create something unique- pick a 1 or 2 items to begin with then build on those things. When you try to look at a lot of different items (paper, beads, yarn, fabric-whatever your craft is) you can become overwhelmed by things and it gives you what I call craft block. If you simplify it down then you can get your creative juices going and not be overwhelmed with all the possibilities.
  • Mortira Craft Tip: Plastic snack cups from kids’ lunches are perfect for holding beads, glitter, buttons, or just about any small bits
  • Lynn OBrien If you are like me and do a lot of different crafts, I organize my tools by using clear locking lid mini boxes. I can label them for easy finding, as well as see through them to see what I have. I store all my mini-totes on shelves so that I can have easy access to them.
  • BeadGoesOn We tumble our Thai silver with Dawn (blue) dish soap & water. Does the best job for us! Loose beads only!
  • Emily Hale mine is to look at the trends, what are people wearing now, and what will people be wearing 6 months from now? maybe not so much a tip? but it helps me focus on what i plan on designing…
  • whimsybeading Turn left over strung beads/crystals into knitting stitch markers using tigertail wire, 1 crimp bead and a touch of glue.
  • Maureen Connolly my jewelry making has veered into the more ‘metal-than-bead’ genre – mainly copper – so my tip is to use (pre-1984) pennies in place of copper discs. I always have a bowl of them in some sand on top of my woodstove so when I need one, it’s warm to start with so it flattens easier and more uniformly.
  • PepperPaige I use a hardware organizer with clear drawers to organize my beads. Tons of little drawers that are perfect for all supplies.
  • genedotts When storing your finished pieces of sliver jewelry. Put a peice of Chaulk in some Cheese Cloth and keep it stored with it.

See the comments below for more tips, and our winner!

Craft tip: Make your own BIG bracelet blanks

December 29, 2009

Anne, who you may have talked with when you phone Rings & Things, had an inspired idea that I want to share.

Anne was asked by a customer: “I love bracelet blanks, but can I get some that are even bigger?” Her response was, “I think I can custom-make some!”

Bolo slides make bigger, custom bracelet blanks

Bolo slides make bigger, custom bracelet blanks

Bolo slides are the ticket. Here’s a great way to multi-purpose this otherwise kind of obscure finding! Just add basemetal link findings, which we sell by the hundreds. Finish the bracelet easily with a fold-over clasp.

Anne used a very cute link with heart pattern in the right-hand bracelet here. In the left one are plain links in antique pewter, for an even more versatile base for your glass or ceramic focal pieces. Another good-looking possibility is to use rope-pattern links (shown above, but here’s a closeup):

Rope-pattern link

Rope-pattern link

Hats off to Anne for her ingenuity, and for sharing this neat jewelry crafts tip with all of us!

Tip: Organize beads by color (and hour!)

December 23, 2009

Once in a while we share tips on recycling…

Turn an old pill box into a bead organizer!

If it's Tuesday, I must be using purple beads!

Bedtime — time for purple peyote!

This works best for seed beads, since the compartments are small. You can organize your beads by color, while stashing them securely to avoid pesky bead spills.

And if you’re seriously compulsive, you get a built-in reminder of which color to use at which time of day.

Thinking about design and contests

October 20, 2009

Rings & Things’ own Metalman, Kurt Madison, took some time before our big design contest to talk about what makes a winning entry…

I have been reflecting on what wins an award in a contest. Is it the biggest / most elaborate entry? The one with the most obvious $$ spent?

What makes this a winning contest entry?

What makes this a winning contest entry?

Lots of times, it does seem to look that way. When you feel like it works that way, try looking at several years of winners for that contest. There may be a unconscious bias working there somewhere. I feel I have seen some cultural bias in international art exhibitions — this happens and you can’t really complain about it. You can become aware of it and use it to your advantage, or at least know that it’s working against you.

So anyway….what makes a winner? I think it’s always design. The work has to have good design.

How to get to good design? Well, I guess my method is to collect ideas for a while, then I do small sketches (thumbnails) and play with my elements (beads/stones/etc.), until I start to get a real idea or concept in my mind’s eye.

Then I do some larger drawing. I really like an expressive/abstract style of drawing — this gives me more ideas. After that: I do a final design drawing to life-size, and really tight so I can cut metal to fit and all. Many times I get halfway through and the materials or visual ideas shift. That may mean a new piece gets started, or that the current one gets benched for a while, or just improvements.

So in this description, how many pieces got designed? Maybe 10 various directions — and from them, picking the best one and making builds for that GOOD DESIGN WINNER.

Multi-purpose this: another use for wire protectors

June 11, 2009

Here’s a quick tip that we found at the excellent Starving Jewelry Artists discussion forum:

Multipurpose this: learn another use for wire protectors!

“I shared this with a friend awhile back and she thought it was a great idea. I came up with it out of frustration.

“I use wire guards (or what ever name you may call them) as extra protection and finishing when using watch faces.

“I never liked the look of the beading wire going through the hole but more than that I was concerned about the durability. I always used two strands of high quality beading wire but never felt extremely confident. Now I have no worries and although it is obvious I still think it looks a little better or more finished.”

– Sophisticated Hippie

Know another great tip for using findings? Share it here in a comment!

DON’T MISS OUR June-July giveaway:
* in our online store, find a fave product & review it there, then…
* …leave a comment about it at the contest article in our blog
* On August 3, five winners will receive coveted Rings & Things gift certificates!
* Enter often & see if you win!

Featured bead: orchids (or propellers)

May 19, 2009

The featured bead this week is the CRYSTALLIZED™ – Swarovski Elements #6906 orchid pendant. Here’s why:

orchid_06-906-20-01

The crystal orchid pendant is lovely to start with. But you can get more for your money, and so can your customers, if you multi-purpose this bead into fashionable steampunk designs.

orchid_06-906-20-150

Given the steampunk affection for making things industrial look pretty, how about a crystal propeller?

orchid_06-906-20-160

This pendant comes in various colors, so blend it into an overall color “blueprint” in your designs. For starters, we’ve thought of using these on leather cuffs from Tafuri Tough. Here’s a similar idea recently made by Cindy Gimbrone using glass beads:

Steampunk watch/propellers jewelry by Cindy Gimbrone

Steampunk “Deconstructed watch” / propellers pendant by Cindy Gimbrone

This is a good illustration of how you can add in some cogs, maybe some wire, watch parts…the sky’s the limit for propeller beads!

Do you have a steampunk inspiration? Lots of components can be re-purposed to use in this style. Share your ideas in a comment!

May giveaway:
* You enter by leaving comments this month
* At the end of May, 2 winners will receive coveted Rings & Things goodie packs!
*
So read the blog regularly, to enter a lot & to see if you won!

Multipurposing: teapot bead cap => Aladdin's lamp charm

April 28, 2009

Multipurposing tip: Rings & Things’ sterling silver teapot bead caps also make a magical Aladdin’s lamp charm.

sterling_teapot_bead_cap_43-546-02

Sterling silver teapot bead cap (Rings & Things #43-546-02)

Credit goes to @tamdoll on Twitter for this great craft business tip! Just “cap” this finding around your favorite 10- to 12mm bead. It makes a fine addition to a charm bracelet, or earrings… Here’s another style that we offer:

Sterling silver teapot bead cap (Rings & Things #43-546-01)

Sterling silver teapot bead cap (Rings & Things #43-546-01)

This means you have at least three flavors of lamp for Arabian Nights-themed jewelry, because we’ve also added this new antiqued-silver plated Aladdin charm:

Aladdin's lamp charm (Rings & Things #44-940-17-AS)

Aladdin’s lamp charm (Rings & Things #44-940-17-AS)

How about an aquiline crystal bead as a lamp? Check out this Aladdin’s Lamp earring design from our Design Gallery!

normal_aladdins_lamp_earrings

Have more ideas for Arabian Nights jewelry? More multipurposing magic in mind? Share by leaving a comment!

April giveaway: “DIY Display Ideas”:
* You enter by leaving comments under the March 31 giveaway announcement
* At the end of April, 2 winners will receive coveted Rings & Things goodie packs!
*
So read the blog regularly to see if you won!