Make It : I just FELT like crafting!
Glass etching is one of those really quick and easy crafts that turns out super satisifying and tempts me to etch every shard of glass in site. Essentially, glass etching paste is an acid that creates a frosted effect on clear glass.
I punched the skull out of a piece of contact paper & stuck it to a squatty jar. To get a crisp punch, and so the contact paper doesn't get stuck inside the punch, I recommend sandwiching the contact paper between two pieces of regular paper.
Now, for the reverse effect—or so the skull is what is frosted—I again placed the contact paper skull punch out on a jar and painted over and around the skull with nail polish.
The etching paste cannot penetrate the enamel-based polish so it works perfect. Peel away the contact paper after the polish is completely dry.
I decided to make these jars coin banks. I spray painted the caps with a grey paint and carefully cut through the metal cap with a craft knife. I used a sliver of tape as a guide because the knife blade tends to pull and slip when cutting metal. I recommend doing this slowly and carefully, making many lighter cuts than trying to get through it with fewer, harder cuts. Cut fingers are hard to craft with.
My very first picture with my new camera, birthday present from Mom & Dad—the Canon S90.
When it comes to jewelry, and especially diamonds, I am the stereotypic girl. The natural beauty, intricate craftsmanship and exorbitant yet sometimes scarce materials, all contribute to my obsessed romance with jewels. I just can't help it! Is it because I was born in April and my birth stone is the most precious?
More recently, I have been quite fascinated with a distinct period of jewelry design—the Georgian. An era of opulence and self indulgence in fashion, design and luxury. The time was named after England's 3 consecutive King George's and span from 1714 until 1836. The aristocratic and wealthy people wore all kinds of jewels, and diamonds were used almost exclusively. Stone cutting was very difficult during the Georgian era and mine cut or the rose cut were the most popular because of this. The mine cuts had a flat top whereas the rose cuts had a pointed top. Every element of the jewelry was handmade, lacking exact precision and manufactured perfection, but making each piece more unique.


One of the most distinct characteristics of the time, besides the cut of the diamond itself, is the way the stones were set. It wasn't unusual for diamonds to be set in sterling silver and then attached to high karat gold mountings. To meet the increasing demand for diamonds in the first half of the 18th century, paste, rock crystal, marcasite, and cut steel were used and considered respectable even for royalty to wear. Paste was a technique in which a special glass was cut and faceted and backed with foil to imitate the sparkle of diamonds. Cut steel jewelry consisted of faceted rosettes of polished steel set in intricate designs. Paste and gemstones alike were mounted with either silver or colored foils behind the closed-back settings, which gave fantastic refraction under the low candle or gaslight of the period.

Unlike jewelry of the Victorian and later periods, Georgian jewelry always involves some hand-craftsmanship on the part of the lapidaries. These jewels were made before the Industrial Revolution of the 1840s and the crafting of pieces were very labor-intensive. It is not unusual to see tool marks on the backs and findings of Georgian jewels, and all of the stones, whether precious or imitation, were set by hand. A complete handmade treasure from start to finish. For sure my favorite period in jewelry history.

I turned 27 on Friday. I had a wonderful Birthday thanks to Ashley, Melissa and my parents, and my incredible friends! I can't begin to express how these people make me feel. Thank you and I love you!
Spring is definitely here now. Changing weather involves changing moods and changing activities. Fresh air and UV rays will hopefully get our creative juices flowing. This is my most favorite photograph I took last summer—before we know it, it will be that time of year again.
My mom gave Melissa & I polymer clay to play with when we were little. It was one of my most favorite things to do. I made Lou & Dippo while in school and recently stumbled on these uncooked heads in a film container, beaten up and funny.
I know Easter has passed but here are a few "beauty" shots of the flocked egg boxes that I demoed on Martha's show last week. All the eggs came from Martha's chickens and all the vintage embellishments from Tinsel Trading. Some have gilded insides but the Araucana blue egg shells were just sealed and left natural. Enjoy.



ZooBorns posted this photo of an elephant Easter egg hunt.