Showing posts with label how to torch fire enamel on copper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to torch fire enamel on copper. Show all posts

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Some New Colors - but still Pennies!!!

My new enamel colors finally arrived - and in less than 24 hours I was back at the bench playing with color combinations.  I got some pink, some lavender and some off white which I combined in these:

The off white makes a nice base for other colors too...... like the red:


and the blue:

and the turquoise:

I did some other combinations:
orange and gold

gold, yellow and red

white, pink and red


These are currently available for purchase at Beads on the Kennebec AND she is having a contest (see rules and more information here ) based on pieces made using the enameled pennies. 


Monday, April 4, 2011

More Torch Fired Enamel Pieces

Another day of working with enamel.  This time I drilled the pennies then domed them before adding the enamel. 
I worked more with layering and colors......trying to achieve a depth to the colors and a more uniform coating of the enamel.  The multiple layers allowed a more varied palette of colors - I stayed in the blue/green family simply because I plan on making a bracelet with these. (the two red ones are from the last enameling session)










Sunday, April 3, 2011

Torch Fired Enamel

if you arrived here from a link on Pinterest or another tutorial/craft site, I have posted a "tutorial" on how I enamel the pennies.  It's here


Oh what fun I had in the workshop yesterday.  For the last six months, I have been collecting information and supplies to try torch fired enamel and finally gave it a try this weekend.  And I'm hooked.  I love it!!! Armed with a tutorial or two (and a comprehensive lesson on using the torch from my patient SO) I drilled some pennies; cleaned them thoroughly and then set out to color them like jelly beans!  As a surprise, my DSO bought me a "starter kit" (of sorts) of assorted enamel powders - 14 little bags of color - to play with as I wanted.  I couldn't wait to get started.

Using the first tutorial I found, I mixed my first enamel powder color choice with distilled water (50/50 ratio) and filled in the top of my first penny.......a penny I hadn't drilled.  The tutorial said to let the enamel and water mixture dry but I did not have the patience to let it dry, so I fired away.  I was a little tentative with the torch at first, but wisely started out making some copper head pins which relaxed my fears a little.  After the first penny was fired, I let it cool in a fiber blanket.  Once it cooled down, I was thrilled with the color and look of it and couldn't wait to do more. 

Head Pins



Faced with the 14 bags of assorted colors, I couldn't wait to try more colors.  Using a screen from a faucet (I absolutely have to get a small hand held sifter) I sifted the colors directly onto the cleaned pennies - and did layers of colors. 

Turquoise enamel powder
Base of opaque orange with a layer of red on top

A layer of golden brown with a layer of turquoise on top

Golden brown with a sifting of my run-off waste

Just to prove that I really used pennies!!

A couple of great, informative articles/tutorials on how to torch fire enamel: