The Look of Burning Embers

January 8, 2015

il_570xN.660979065_2xvsDon’t you love embers? Those lively, sparking, crawling fires inside a burning log that move in a seemingly choreographed dance? They are mesmerizing and calming and one of the neatest things about sitting in front of a fire and relaxing. I have tried emulating them in polymer. You can even see one of my modest attempts in an article on faux organics in the Fall 2013 issue of The Polymer Arts. But this particular photo of a copper inlaid bracelet created by Adriana Allen really seems to capture the light and liveliness of them.

It doesn’t seem that Adriana intended to create an ember-like appearance with the rubbed-in foil, but it sure gives one an idea about how to go about creating something like this. The way the copper is more rubbed off in the more open indentations and denser in the thinner lines does emulate that variation in the ember of a burning coal. It is lovely, as is the blue clay contrasting the orange of the copper.

Adriana creates beautiful cuff bracelets with a lot of texture, leaning heavily on faux antiquing and patina to get her signature look. Take a look through her Etsy shop for more beauties and ideas, while I go give my lively 8 month old German Shepard some much needed attention. Her name, by the way, is Ember.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or an issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front    PolymerArts Kaleidoscope     lpedit

Studies in Gray

October 6, 2014

asari_earrings_by_tishaia-dGray is not what we may think of as a particularly exciting color palette, but this non-color has quite the design concept to teach us all. I say “non-color”, of course, because gray has no color hue, not as a concept. Many grays we use actually do have a recognizable cool or warm tone due to have a very, very slight hue in the medium we are using, but true grays are simply a position between pure black and pure white. They are, in actuality, measurements of value, which is one aspect of a color.

This is the basis of what grays can teach us in terms of design. If you create in grays, you are creating only with value rather than with color. Variations in value can illustrate emotion and atmosphere based on the level of contrast and the balance of grays to any other color that might be used. If you are working solely or primarily with gray, you are depending on the contrast to help relay the feeling of the piece as a support of the form, image, lines and/or textures you are working with. That makes working in grays a fantastic exercise in the importance of value and contrast. Grays can also make some amazingly striking and emotive work.

These earrings, for example, one pair out of what looks to be a series by Poland’s Tishaia, displays variation in gray in the texture in the leaf vein patterns whose light value contrasts against the black clay which, due to the limitation of the pigment density of the clay is not actually black but a very dark gray. This contrast along with the dominating bold lines, make for a strong, contemporary feel. The lack of other colors make the blue stones really stand out. The mid-range values in the stones also brings a kind of bridge in contrast between the light silver and the black clays in this highly value dependent set.

You can see the interesting forms Tishaia creates in this series on her Deviant Art page and more on her work in her Etsy shop and on her Facebook page.

 

 If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

14-P3 Fall-Play cover Full sm  Blog2 -2014-02Feb-3   polymer clay butterfly ornament sm   TPA Blog Newsletter Ad  ShadesofClay 1014 v2  tpabl-10-9072014

Atypical Bracelets

March 19, 2014

There is actually a lot of commonality between today’s bracelets and the one’s in yesterday’s post. Like Evgeny, Andrea Zajacová also uses contrast in texture but in a more graphic manner. The concept and approach to design using contrast is similar but with a very different feel. Although obviously handmade and inexact, the bracelet is designed in sections instead of scattering the three-dimensional pieces around the whole of it’s circumference. This gives the bracelet a specific area of focus with that fully tactile texture contrasting the low visual texture of the other areas as well as high contrast in color between the purples and yellows.

b-2831431_6d192ac097

Andrea posted variations of this bracelet on this blog post. Great colors palettes. And she has a lot more art to share in her store as well.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

14P1 cover Fnl   PCW blue string art cane   Blog2 -2014-02Feb-2

The Look of Burning Embers

January 8, 2015
Posted in

il_570xN.660979065_2xvsDon’t you love embers? Those lively, sparking, crawling fires inside a burning log that move in a seemingly choreographed dance? They are mesmerizing and calming and one of the neatest things about sitting in front of a fire and relaxing. I have tried emulating them in polymer. You can even see one of my modest attempts in an article on faux organics in the Fall 2013 issue of The Polymer Arts. But this particular photo of a copper inlaid bracelet created by Adriana Allen really seems to capture the light and liveliness of them.

It doesn’t seem that Adriana intended to create an ember-like appearance with the rubbed-in foil, but it sure gives one an idea about how to go about creating something like this. The way the copper is more rubbed off in the more open indentations and denser in the thinner lines does emulate that variation in the ember of a burning coal. It is lovely, as is the blue clay contrasting the orange of the copper.

Adriana creates beautiful cuff bracelets with a lot of texture, leaning heavily on faux antiquing and patina to get her signature look. Take a look through her Etsy shop for more beauties and ideas, while I go give my lively 8 month old German Shepard some much needed attention. Her name, by the way, is Ember.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or an issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

businesscard-3.5inx2in-h-front    PolymerArts Kaleidoscope     lpedit

Read More

Studies in Gray

October 6, 2014
Posted in

asari_earrings_by_tishaia-dGray is not what we may think of as a particularly exciting color palette, but this non-color has quite the design concept to teach us all. I say “non-color”, of course, because gray has no color hue, not as a concept. Many grays we use actually do have a recognizable cool or warm tone due to have a very, very slight hue in the medium we are using, but true grays are simply a position between pure black and pure white. They are, in actuality, measurements of value, which is one aspect of a color.

This is the basis of what grays can teach us in terms of design. If you create in grays, you are creating only with value rather than with color. Variations in value can illustrate emotion and atmosphere based on the level of contrast and the balance of grays to any other color that might be used. If you are working solely or primarily with gray, you are depending on the contrast to help relay the feeling of the piece as a support of the form, image, lines and/or textures you are working with. That makes working in grays a fantastic exercise in the importance of value and contrast. Grays can also make some amazingly striking and emotive work.

These earrings, for example, one pair out of what looks to be a series by Poland’s Tishaia, displays variation in gray in the texture in the leaf vein patterns whose light value contrasts against the black clay which, due to the limitation of the pigment density of the clay is not actually black but a very dark gray. This contrast along with the dominating bold lines, make for a strong, contemporary feel. The lack of other colors make the blue stones really stand out. The mid-range values in the stones also brings a kind of bridge in contrast between the light silver and the black clays in this highly value dependent set.

You can see the interesting forms Tishaia creates in this series on her Deviant Art page and more on her work in her Etsy shop and on her Facebook page.

 

 If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

14-P3 Fall-Play cover Full sm  Blog2 -2014-02Feb-3   polymer clay butterfly ornament sm   TPA Blog Newsletter Ad  ShadesofClay 1014 v2  tpabl-10-9072014

Read More

Atypical Bracelets

March 19, 2014
Posted in

There is actually a lot of commonality between today’s bracelets and the one’s in yesterday’s post. Like Evgeny, Andrea Zajacová also uses contrast in texture but in a more graphic manner. The concept and approach to design using contrast is similar but with a very different feel. Although obviously handmade and inexact, the bracelet is designed in sections instead of scattering the three-dimensional pieces around the whole of it’s circumference. This gives the bracelet a specific area of focus with that fully tactile texture contrasting the low visual texture of the other areas as well as high contrast in color between the purples and yellows.

b-2831431_6d192ac097

Andrea posted variations of this bracelet on this blog post. Great colors palettes. And she has a lot more art to share in her store as well.

 

If you like this blog, support The Polymer Arts projects with a subscription or issue of The Polymer Arts magazine as well as supporting our advertising partners.

14P1 cover Fnl   PCW blue string art cane   Blog2 -2014-02Feb-2

Read More
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