Showing posts with label bead chic by margot potter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bead chic by margot potter. Show all posts

Cheers Necklace!

Bubbly Necklace Copyright Margot Potter 2012

This is another necklace set I created to wear to the shows.  Technically, I re-created it by adding more stuff to my original design.  I used vintage faux pearls, SWAROVSKI ELEMENTS and Beadalon's fab polyester chain.  The pearls are absurdly huge, which makes this a very fun design to wear.

xoxo
Madge

Queen of Hearts Wire Earrings

Queen of Hearts Earrings Copyright Margot Potter
(Make sure you click on the pop up window of this image to read the text.)

Queen of Hearts Earrings
Copyright 2011 Margot Potter

Ah, Valentine’s Day. Love it or lump it, you can’t escape it! Love may come and love may go, but friends are forever. Why not remind your best girlfriend how much she means to you this year with a lovely pair of wire and crystal earrings and a funny card to make her smile? Attach the earrings to a card for a two for one by punching a small hole for each ear wire using a pin and threading them on the cover!

The image is from my personal ephemera collection, and I couldn’t resist adding a little text...

Materials
20 gauge annealed iron wire
6 8mm fuchsia SWAROVSKI ELEMENTS faceted rounds

Tools
10mm dowel
2 pairs chain nose pliers
Chain nose pliers
Memory wire shears
Chasing hammer
Bench block
Bench block pad
Spool of thread

1. Cut off a 5” segment of 20 gauge annealed iron wire with memory wire shears. Don’t use regular wire cutters, this wire will eat them up!

2. Use chain nose pliers to bend a sharp bend in the center (this is the pointed side of your heart.)

3. Round the wire ends into a heart shape, use something round to maintain the curve, an average sized spool of thread works nicely here!

4. Use round nose pliers to turn a small loop in both ends.


5. Use a small segment of wire to bind the loops together as in photo. I wrapped them three times, cut the excess wire and tucked the tail under with chain nose pliers.

6. Hammer the shapes flat using your chasing hammer and steel bench block.

7. Create matching ear wires bending a 1.5” segment of wire over a 10mm dowel. Turn a loop in one end and make a small curve in the other using round nose pliers.

8. Hammer front side of ear wires flat with chasing hammer and bench block.

9. Thread each crystal with 22 gauge gun metal wire, loop one end and coil the other.

10. Use the 10mm dowel to create two jump rings with the 20 gauge black wire. Hammer these flat using your chasing hammer and bench block.

11. Attach the ear wires to the top of each heart using chain nose pliers. (Attach them on opposite sides to create a left and a right earring.)

12. Attach the jump ring and dangles to the bottom of each heart using your chain nose pliers to open and secure the ring closed with tension.

Valentine's Day Dollar Store Craft: Sweetheart Foam Necklace

Sweetheart Foam Necklace and Earrings Copyright Margot Potter 2010

I have plenty of romantic projects in my crafty coffers, so I'll be bringing them out over the next few weeks and introducing some new ideas as we lead up to the oft dreaded holiday of St. Valentine. This one is so quick and easy and of course, depending on which foam stickers you select, can be adapted to suit any occasion! You can find the step by step instructions with lots of pics here. What's not to love about that?

You can find these foam stickers at the discount chains, craft and dollar stores. 

If you'd like the original set, it's for sale for a song in my Etsy shoppe!

Love
Madge

Retrofabulous New Year's Fascinator

Copyright Margot Potter 2011

Well heck and howdy doody, it's almost New Year's! I absolutely can not wait to bid this year adieu and welcome in 2012, how about you?! We whipped up a little video with a Retrofabulous New Year's Fascinator tutorial below.  I sing, I craft, I act like a dork...what could be more festive?!

xoxo,
Madge

Linky Love Crafty Blogger Style!

Scroll down as there is more below!

xoxo,
Madge

So many ideas have been bouncing around in my noggin' all week, I just need to clone myself to make them all happen. I have some thoughts...which I will share later this week even though I'm chomping at the bit to share them now. Let's just say it starts with this idea: Give Handmade. (Make Handmade. Give Handmade. Live Handmade.)  That's all for now...more to come. 


Okay so I'm geeked out about this nifty new widget I got today. Thanks to the fab folks from CraftCult! So much cuter than a plain ol' Etsy widget, no?  Woot!

Halloween FaBOOlosity Day Eight: Halloween Hootenanny Card



Halloween Hootenanny Card Copyright 2009 Margot Potter for ILovetoCreate

It's Day 8 of Halloween FaBOOlosity at The Impatient Crafter Blog.  Today's offering is a fun little invitation that can easily be customized to suit your style.  Owls have become so iconic over the past few years they seem to be staying around.  Woot woot!  Or is that hoot hoot?  Wah, wah.  This could easily be made into a cat if you aren't an owl person.

You could use any variety of papers to make this an every day card.  Follow this link for the instructions!


Rice Freeman-Zachary reviews Bead Chic!

I know, this is supposed to be Freaky Friday...but I'm terrible at following rules, even rules I make up. That's why I wrote my new book Bead Chic. I like to color outside of the lines and I want to help others give themselves permission to do the same. Multi-talented and incredibly charming Rice Freeman-Zachery just posted a terrific video review of the book on YouTube and I wanted to share it with you. She gets it...and I think you'll get it once you get the book and start exploring new approaches to design!


Free Jewelry Making Project #4 from Bead Chic


Steel City Earrings from Bead Chic by Margot Potter ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

I can't believe this is my final free project from Bead Chic! Where does the time go? This one is a little more complex and a little bit funky. You can refine it or make it funkier as you choose. I love the primitive look of annealed iron wire, you can buy it at hardware stores and some places online. It's a little rusty, so you need to clean it before you wear it!

I enjoy bending and shaping wire and the nice thing about a very stiff wire like iron is that it maintains its shape without too much need for work hardening, yet it takes to being hammered beautifully. These earrings are made from three artfully bent wire segments that swing and sway separately from one another. I added freshwater pearls suspended in some organic wire wrapping with a thin gauge of silver plated wire. These, to me, have a Sundance Catalog appeal.

In fact...when I pitched this book here is how I summed it up:

Banana Republic and Sundance Catalog have a latte at Starbucks.

Chic, modern, upscale with just a little edge!

The variation for this project is created by the lovely Ms. Barbe Saint-John. You'll have to buy the book to get the step by step photos and to see Barbe's gorgeous earrings. You can also leave a comment here to win the last free signed copy of the book!

xoxo
Madge

Bead Chic
Steel City Earrings
Chapter One
Scale



Materials
2 8mm faceted cream freshwater pearls
24 gauge silver plated wire
20 gauge annealed iron wire
Gun metal French clips

Tools
Chasing hammer
Mini anvil
Large round dowel (I used a large marker)
Small dowel (I used a metal end of a rat tail comb)
Memory wire shears
Round nose pliers
Chain nose pliers
Wire cutters

Tip: Play with the wire to get a feel for it, different wires have different levels of malleability. These do not have to be perfect...so don’t sweat it if they aren’t!

1. Cut a 3” segment of steel wire using your memory wire shears.

2. Bend the center around a large marker.

3. Hammer the ‘u’ section flat using the flat end of your chasing hammer.

4. Cut a 1 2/8” section of wire and use the tip of your round nose pliers to create a very small loop in both ends.

5. Cut a 1 ¼” section of wire and bend it over the metal end of a rat tail comb.

6. Use your round nose pliers to create a loop in both wire ends.

7. Wrap a 24 gauge wire tightly to one side of the top section of your ‘u’ shaped component as in photo moving the wire down the core.

8. Wrap wire around core in a free form manner.

9. Thread a pearl on end of wire.

10. Thread wire around opposite side tightly and wrap remaining wire moving up the core in a freeform manner as before.

11. Cut off excess wire and use chain nose pliers to tuck your wire tails in.

12. Connect your segments together as follows: Attach the ‘v’ shaped component to the loops on the end of your bar component. Attach the ‘u’ shaped component to the bar. The loops should all face backwards so the components can swing freely when worn.

13. Attach your ear wires to the top of each ‘v’ section.

Free Jewelry Making Project #3 from Bead Chic by Margot Potter


Did you know how easy it is to create your own findings? Once you master that skill, you'll find it difficult to buy them ready made! This project from my new book Bead Chic shows you how to create some longer bent and curved ear wires. You can opt to use base metal instead of sterling, but definitely use a 20 gauge wire made from stainless or another more sturdy metal and make sure you sand or use a wire rounder on the ends. I used a rat tail comb to create the sharp bend...I'm of the mind that you use what you have at hand!

I called this design 'Effortless Elegance' because it's just a few lovely beads and an artfully bent wire. This is from the chapter on Pattern and the variation is a little more complex with some hammering of the front part of the ear wire and some simple wire wrapping on a QuickLinks component. You could wrap beads on the front part of the ear wire...or add coiled wire...or add a bead or two...see how this keeps shifting if you make small changes? That's what this book is all about! You'll need to buy the book to get the step by step photos.

If you leave a comment here, I will select one of you to win a signed copy of the new book and a bonus swag sample. I'll announce the winner next Saturday August 28th.

Good luck!

Cheers,
Madge

Effortless Elegance Earrings Copyright Margot Potter 2009

Effortless Elegance Earrings
Bead Chic
Copyright Margot Potter ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Materials
2 12x17m black onyx polished tear drop beads
6 3mm red coral beads
6 24 gauge sterling head pins
2 ball tip sterling head pins
20 gauge sterling wire

Tools
Round nose pliers
Chain nose pliers
Thin metal dowel (I used metal end of a rattail comb)

1. Cut off two 3” segments of wire.

2. Bend wire over a thin dowel to create a crease or point, this should be not quite in the center of the wire and in the same spot on both wires.

3. Gently round both wire tails into a matching curve.

4. Sand ends of wire.

5. Bend a loop in one end of wire using round nose pliers.

6. Create wrapped dangles using ball tip head pins and onyx beads. Repeat for coral beads using regular head pins.

7. Attach beads to loop at end of ear wire onyx first followed by three coral beads. Use chain nose pliers to open and close loop.

Bead Chic is HERE!


IT'S HERE! MY NEW BOOK IS HERE! I was a little surprised in between doctor appointments here in Denver at National Jewish Hospital when I discovered that Bead Chic is out! If you'd like a chance to win a free copy, leave a comment here. I'll pick two winners next Thusday! Or you can head over to Amazon and get a copy ASAP! Stay tuned for some free projects and more prizes when I get home!

It's been hectic, scary, weird and wonderful here. I'm hopeful that I'll return with some concrete answers and pathways to getting my breath back. My mom is here to support me, which has been really tremendous of her! I'll have a full report when I return next week.

Love
Madge

How To Write and Publish a Craft Book Part Five


I sold my seventh book. I negotiated and signed the contract. I have begun the tedious process of creating the projects. Everyone has a different approach to this. Mine begins with an idea. Then I write my introduction, which fleshes out my idea. Then I create the outline. I determine the focus of each chapter. I don't work from chapter to chapter because I like to bounce around to the design that captures my fancy at any given moment.

My daughter started watching Cake Boss on Netflix. What a brilliant show, what an amazing artist! What I love is the moment in each show where Buddy's brain kicks into overdrive and he comes up with the concept. The thing I love is the graphic visual representation they create of what he's thinking. That is exactly how I design. I am inspired by something...an image, a motif, a pattern and then my brain begins to form an idea. So let's say it's a turret from an iconic building in Russia. I begin to think about how I can take some beads and wire and make a turret?

Then I make the design. It's never as easy as just thinking about it and making it...because there are basic laws of physics that I am defying with every twist of the wire. Just like the Cake Boss has to deal with fondant and icing and cake that may not cooperate, there may be a carnage of epic proportions around my desk...bits of wire, broken beads, funked up findings all sprinkled liberally with juicy expletives, but eventually with persistence, my vision becomes reality. Then my husband looks under my desk and shakes his head.

How in the heck do you do that in one day?!

It's Hurricane Madge!

Now if only I had a team of minions to do my bidding. Hey make this wire curl on the jig for me! You, hammer out this sheet metal! Over there, stop slacking and get this wire wrapping started!

Sigh.

I'm a team of one. One stubborn, impatient and determined woman who when inspired with an idea will insist on seeing it to completion. Therefore, in reality, my determination trumps my impatience every time.

If you want to write a craft book, you'll need to find out how to take your ideas and make them real. You'll need to fine tune your design and writing patterns and make them work to your advantage. You'll have deadlines, sometimes insanely short ones, and you will have to meet them. Deadlines are not arbitrary. Deadlines revolve around the entire team who is, in fact, waiting patiently to take your finished pieces and your concept and make a book. So...in reality...there are minions. They aren't your minions though because they're working for the publisher.

Damn.

I need to work on that.

I will be insanely busy for the next two months. This is the shortest deadline I have ever had. I am doing my best to take it one design at a time, but in light of the other things on my plate, it's a daunting task to say the least.

E...gads.

Enough blather, I have a book to make!

Love
Madge

Saturday TastyLinks and Bead Chic Project Sneak Peek!


Sneaky Peek of a project from my new book Bead Chic All Rights Reserved Copyright 2009 Margot Potter

I am in the midst of a whirlwind week filled with exciting new possibilities and opportunities...none of which I can share yet...but trust me when I tell you that those big dreams I've been spinning into reality are finally materializing. I have so many things to do this week that my brain is about to explode. So much for the holiday weekend! If you're up and around tomorrow at 5am EST, I'll be on QVC with a fabulous 45 piece all occasion card collection you simply have to see to believe. Pour yourself a big cup of Java and join me!

I got an advance copy of my new book Bead Chic and it's really beautiful. Here's my quick description of the book as I pitched it, "Banana Republic and Sundance Catalog have a latte at Starbucks." Are you feeling me? This is a book for the fashion savvy gal who hasn't yet dipped her toes into the bead pool. She loves accessories, and she thinks to herself...I wonder if I could make that? Well, she can and I'm going to show her (and you, oh fashion and craft savvy reader) how to take inspiration and make it your own. The book has six chapters: Scale, Color, Texture, Pattern, Foundations and Focal Elements. The concept is that by changing one of these core elements, you can tailor an idea to suit your personal style. It's about learning how to go from monkey see-monkey do mentality to thinking like a designer. I really hope folks like this book. I give a little taste of stringing, wire wrapping, hammering, exposed wire, creating your own components, knotting... It's a pu pu platter approach to jewelry making folks can use to find directions to explore further.

Here are this week's TastyLinks from the crafty blogger gang:

The Artful Crafter
Advice on selling large lots of craft supplies.

Stefanie Girard's Sweater Surgery
How to make a recycled sweater gearhead hot pad inspired by the book- The Journal Junkies Workshop

Mixed Media Artist
Can you ever have too much fabric? Cyndi thinks not! Come and add your favorite link to Cyndi's favorites.

Margot Potter The Impatient Crafter
Madge shares her Zen Master Slacker Mommy's Guide to Letting Things Ride.

Cross Stitch at About.com
Read loads of great tips on Cross Stitch and then share your own - what tips and tricks have you learned that keep you out of tight spots?

Crafty Princess Diaries
Tammy is learning more every day when it comes to her Etsy shop, like the importance of tags and the number of items you should list, but it's definitely a work in progress.

Craftside-A behind-the-scenes peek at a crafty world
Craftside's got a hot new Look. Learn, and Create video featuring Barbe Saint John showing us how to make a Steampunk hair pin, a free bow graphic download, how to add words to a journal page and a bow, and an inside peek into 1000 ideas from 100 Fashion Designers.

Aileen's Musings
Aileen's excited to share her first how to video called Ribbon's & Lace. Take a quiet moment, grab a cuppa and stop by and see what its all about.

About Family Crafts
Is getting to be that time of year when people get out more whether it be day trips, camping trips, or gathering with friends and family and having picnics and barbecues! Find out how you can incorporate crafting into your camping and picnic fun.

Saturday TastyLinks and more Blather and Nonsense!

What I Learned at my Grandmother's Funeral Shoes for Art is Wickedly Good Retreat Class Copyright 2009 Margot Potter (and for copyright infringement FYI the pictures are of my actual grandmother!)

I finished my big project, it looks fabulous...though my anal retentive side wishes I had more crystals to completely cover the toe caps on the tennies...but alas I did not. One must work with the materials one is given. After CHA I'll share pics of the project. There are no teeth marks, FYI. Har har.

I also finished edits on my new book Bead Chic which debuts in Summer of 2010. I still haven't seen the romance pics or a cover and of course I can't wait. Books are a labor of love and so much of it is hurry up and wait. This is my sixth title and I'm just as excited as I was six years ago when I published my first one.

My class proposals for Art is You's October retreat Art is Wickedly Good have been accepted. Yay! I'm teaching among some of the biggest names in mixed media, altered arts and assemblage and my classes are really going to be cool. My classes are part design, part Craft Therapy with plenty of irony and copious amounts of humor. We'll be making a pair of altered shoes and a black hat. The concepts are based on posts from my other blog: What I Learned at my Grandmother's Funeral and The Tao of the Black Hat. The projects will be physical explorations of personal narrative as it relates to the theme. The shoes are about personal empowerment and the hat is about embracing the moments in our lives when we become the bad guy in someone else's story. It is inevitable, no matter how well we try to live that somewhere along the way we'll find someone who sees us as the bad guy. We can see the power and the gift in that role, or not. We all have roles we play in our families, and the shoes are about rejecting those roles and becoming our true selves. We'll do some writing and then we'll dive into the projects and make glorious messes! I can not wait. Everyone's finished projects will be unique to them...so my shoes are just for inspiration.

Clover has a new flower loom that creates Hana-Ami flowers! Check out this video from When Creativity Knocks!

Here is this week's sampling from the craftacular crew of Crafty Bloggers:

Alexa Westerfield a.k.a. Swelldesigner
Alexa gets back into her crafty groove with a cool & modern statement ring!

Aileen's Musings
Aileen has a blogoversary coming up and she's offering a fun giveaway!

About Family Crafts
Have a sick kid at home? Check out this collection of crafts Sherri has compiled to help entertain them while they get better.

Cross Stitch at About.com
Connie has a "handy" motif you can adapt for multiple uses. Stitch her suggested saying or choose one of your own.

Crafty Princess Diaries
Even though this crafty princess is from the South, she still needs a warm crochet hat now and then.

Craftside-A behind-the-scenes peek at a crafty world
The first week of 2010 at Craftside brings you ho-tos on crocheting broomstick lace and then framing it up to store your earrings, stringing up a ribbon and pearl zigzag necklace, and a call for entries for a new book-1000 Ideas for Decorating Cakes, Cupcakes & Cookies.

The Artful Crafter
Eileen went shopping in her closet and made a 20-something sweater new again. Here’s how to update a dated BIG sweater.

Mixed Media Artist
A new year, a new technique! Cyndi shares the first steps to making a shibori background fabric for a new quilt.

Margot Potter The Impatient Crafter
Madge opens up a rather sticky can of worms in this post about copyright infringement. Right click, save. Done.