Home > texture > A Picture Journey: Sea Glass Bezels
A Picture Journey: Sea Glass Bezels
Posted on Friday, October 14, 2011 by Jewelry making supplies New York City
This is an older post from my personal blog, but I really wanted to share it with you all, here, on Love My Art Jewelry. I re-wrote the post when I was making a second large batch of bezels for another sea glass festival. Enjoy!
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What is, and has been on my bead table for three days, are bezels. I named them lilly pad bezels, due to the texture I gave them. I wanted to make a lot, so I would have enough bracelets and necklaces for the Lewes DE Coastal Arts Festival next weekend. Here they are, all 18 (there were 21, but three fell by the wayside, due to complications in the soldering stage.............)
I thought it may be fun to walk you through the journey I have taken the past three days, while making these. I like pictures, who doesn't like pictures, so come with me, on a bezel adventure.
First I select the sea glass and items that I want to bezel. Then I trace a larger outline on copper, cut it out, file and sand the edges.
Next, I match up the items with their copper counterpart, and trace them so I can add the texture to the outer portion of the bezel.
Three: texture added. I use the flat back side of my rivet hammer and slowly turn the copper as I hammer to acheive that sunburst pattern. I then make sure the hammer the entire piece flat so the bezel will lay flat.
Four: measure, cut and solder the bezels (the fine silver surround). This part I hate. This part has no pictures. Once they are measured, cut and soldered, I then sand the bottoms flat, and then solder them to the copper (using a butane torch and silver solder paste). This portion took me ALL DAY yesterday, about 8 hours!
Five: clean them and shine them up. After they are soldered, they go into the pickle pot. Once the tarnish is removed, I used my dremel to clean them up a bit. Then I matched them back up with their items to be bezeled.
Six: Place items inside bezels.Sometimes I glue mine. I know you shouldn't have to if the bezel is right, but it makes it easier when bezeling irregular shapes like sea glass. Once the glue dries, your item won't move around as you work your bezel.
Seven: secure the bezels. I like to use my wood dapping blocks as much as I can, because I tend to go off the bezel as I firm it up, and I don't want to scratch my sea glass!!! I only use my burnisher at the end.
PLEASE NOTE: This time around, I did the liver of sulphur at this stage, before tightening the bezels, that way I could clean up any that got under the sea glass. The way I did it in the original tutorial is fine if your items are not transparent, but if some liver of sulphur gets under the bezel (and it probably will) it will show.
Eight: punch holes, file backside to remove any excess lip from hole punch
Nine: add texture with pliers- bending up and down. Then sand along back and side edges to smooth again and sand all along bezel
Ten: add patina to antique them. I use gel Liver of Sulphur and apply it with a q-tip (real high tech, right?) I do this because it gives me the most control. When you bezel items like sea glass, that are transparent, you don't want any of the L.O.S. to get under the stone, or you will have dark spots on it, and its ruined.
Eleven: I rub the LOS off with a dry paper towel. This really gives the copper and great brown color.
TA-Da!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And here I am doing it again! It is fun, and I do love it, and the finished product, so.........here is one of the necklaces that was born of this last bezel making session!
Here are a couple more of the finished necklaces from my last batch, and I still have a bunch in reserve to play with. It is worth it to work in batches!
I hope you found something you can take away from this. Though its not an in depth tutorial, it does give you an overview of what is involved in bezeling stone.
Any questions?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What is, and has been on my bead table for three days, are bezels. I named them lilly pad bezels, due to the texture I gave them. I wanted to make a lot, so I would have enough bracelets and necklaces for the Lewes DE Coastal Arts Festival next weekend. Here they are, all 18 (there were 21, but three fell by the wayside, due to complications in the soldering stage.............)
I thought it may be fun to walk you through the journey I have taken the past three days, while making these. I like pictures, who doesn't like pictures, so come with me, on a bezel adventure.
Next, I match up the items with their copper counterpart, and trace them so I can add the texture to the outer portion of the bezel.
Three: texture added. I use the flat back side of my rivet hammer and slowly turn the copper as I hammer to acheive that sunburst pattern. I then make sure the hammer the entire piece flat so the bezel will lay flat.
Four: measure, cut and solder the bezels (the fine silver surround). This part I hate. This part has no pictures. Once they are measured, cut and soldered, I then sand the bottoms flat, and then solder them to the copper (using a butane torch and silver solder paste). This portion took me ALL DAY yesterday, about 8 hours!
Five: clean them and shine them up. After they are soldered, they go into the pickle pot. Once the tarnish is removed, I used my dremel to clean them up a bit. Then I matched them back up with their items to be bezeled.
Six: Place items inside bezels.Sometimes I glue mine. I know you shouldn't have to if the bezel is right, but it makes it easier when bezeling irregular shapes like sea glass. Once the glue dries, your item won't move around as you work your bezel.
Seven: secure the bezels. I like to use my wood dapping blocks as much as I can, because I tend to go off the bezel as I firm it up, and I don't want to scratch my sea glass!!! I only use my burnisher at the end.
PLEASE NOTE: This time around, I did the liver of sulphur at this stage, before tightening the bezels, that way I could clean up any that got under the sea glass. The way I did it in the original tutorial is fine if your items are not transparent, but if some liver of sulphur gets under the bezel (and it probably will) it will show.
Eight: punch holes, file backside to remove any excess lip from hole punch
Nine: add texture with pliers- bending up and down. Then sand along back and side edges to smooth again and sand all along bezel
Ten: add patina to antique them. I use gel Liver of Sulphur and apply it with a q-tip (real high tech, right?) I do this because it gives me the most control. When you bezel items like sea glass, that are transparent, you don't want any of the L.O.S. to get under the stone, or you will have dark spots on it, and its ruined.
Eleven: I rub the LOS off with a dry paper towel. This really gives the copper and great brown color.
Twleve: I polish the silver bezel with a cloth to shine it up, so it contrasts the copper.
TA-Da!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
And here I am doing it again! It is fun, and I do love it, and the finished product, so.........here is one of the necklaces that was born of this last bezel making session!
seaglass, Lisa Peter Art Cab, Maku Studio ammonite cab, silver, recycled sari silk
I used some of my silver this time around. I miss it so much!!!!!!Here are a couple more of the finished necklaces from my last batch, and I still have a bunch in reserve to play with. It is worth it to work in batches!
I hope you found something you can take away from this. Though its not an in depth tutorial, it does give you an overview of what is involved in bezeling stone.
Any questions?
Category Article beach glass, ceramc bead tutorial, copper, fine silver, sea glass bezel, solder, texture
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