The Electroformed Form

November 5, 2013

I can’t tell you how excited I am to have an article on electroforming with polymer in the next issue. Electroforming is the process of using electrical current to adhere metal (copper in this case) to designated areas on a form. I have been dying to try this technique for years now, but the expense and seeming complexity has had me delay diving in. However, this article has convinced me that the process doesn’t have to be terribly expensive, and it’s pretty simple, too. What was even more exciting about this article was that it was written by a Russian artist, Elena Aleshina, with next to no English  fluency, and me with no Russian language knowledge at all! It kept hitting me how cool and crazy the world is that I can ‘talk’  with this artist from Russia without help of a third person. We did hire a translator to translate her Russian-written article, but it’s really neat to get emails in Cyrillic. Such pretty script it is. I don’t know, maybe my nerd side is showing too much, but new technology is just so cool sometimes!

I’m saving Elena’s electroforming work for the article, but I also wanted to show you the American artist that first got me fascinated with the prospect some years back, Cassy Muronaka. She actually wrote up a ten part blog on the subject back in early 2011. Here are some of the pieces she posted in the process:

big-beedz-bead1 electroforming-61

Now tell me you’re not the least bit interested in knowing how the process works and you would never want to try it. Cassy’s process is slightly different than Elena’s so if you do have a keen interest, I would suggest reading Cassy’s blog posts as well as Elena’s article when the issue comes out later this month. Between the two of them, you just might find the right options to get yourself started on this amazing technique. Then tell me when you’re set up so I can come play too, because chances are you’ll have a set-up ready to go long before I find the spare time to do so.

Pluffy Idea

I’m going to be brief today. Not that there is much to say about this intriguing idea. Many of us are already quite fond of extruding out polymer but why limit it to our extruding guns?

I think Elena Aleshina must have had way too much fun creating this flower like polymer puffs with Pluffy Sculpey, lightweight bakeable clay. According to her Flickr page, she is just using nylon netting and tulle. How fun!

I do wonder if well conditioned polymer would go through a heavier duty kind of screen with similar effects. Something else to add to my list of experiments. If any of you try this, or have tried this idea before, send me photos!

The Electroformed Form

November 5, 2013
Posted in

I can’t tell you how excited I am to have an article on electroforming with polymer in the next issue. Electroforming is the process of using electrical current to adhere metal (copper in this case) to designated areas on a form. I have been dying to try this technique for years now, but the expense and seeming complexity has had me delay diving in. However, this article has convinced me that the process doesn’t have to be terribly expensive, and it’s pretty simple, too. What was even more exciting about this article was that it was written by a Russian artist, Elena Aleshina, with next to no English  fluency, and me with no Russian language knowledge at all! It kept hitting me how cool and crazy the world is that I can ‘talk’  with this artist from Russia without help of a third person. We did hire a translator to translate her Russian-written article, but it’s really neat to get emails in Cyrillic. Such pretty script it is. I don’t know, maybe my nerd side is showing too much, but new technology is just so cool sometimes!

I’m saving Elena’s electroforming work for the article, but I also wanted to show you the American artist that first got me fascinated with the prospect some years back, Cassy Muronaka. She actually wrote up a ten part blog on the subject back in early 2011. Here are some of the pieces she posted in the process:

big-beedz-bead1 electroforming-61

Now tell me you’re not the least bit interested in knowing how the process works and you would never want to try it. Cassy’s process is slightly different than Elena’s so if you do have a keen interest, I would suggest reading Cassy’s blog posts as well as Elena’s article when the issue comes out later this month. Between the two of them, you just might find the right options to get yourself started on this amazing technique. Then tell me when you’re set up so I can come play too, because chances are you’ll have a set-up ready to go long before I find the spare time to do so.

Read More

Pluffy Idea

November 8, 2012
Posted in ,

I’m going to be brief today. Not that there is much to say about this intriguing idea. Many of us are already quite fond of extruding out polymer but why limit it to our extruding guns?

I think Elena Aleshina must have had way too much fun creating this flower like polymer puffs with Pluffy Sculpey, lightweight bakeable clay. According to her Flickr page, she is just using nylon netting and tulle. How fun!

I do wonder if well conditioned polymer would go through a heavier duty kind of screen with similar effects. Something else to add to my list of experiments. If any of you try this, or have tried this idea before, send me photos!

Read More
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