Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Stretchy rose (byzantine) bracelet





Whoever came up with these stretchy jump rings is a genius. I almost want to say I love them, but they haven't taken me out to dinner yet.
I really don't like clasps, especially since I have fat wrists for a girl. One size fits all means my wrist needs to suck it in to get the clasp to work. And heaven forbid it's one of those lobster clasps and you're trying to do it one handed. I have a few spinny clasps on some bracelets but lets face it, one handed you're hopeless. So our husbands and our friends are forever loved as our "Hey, can you put this on for me" go to person.

Moving on. Here is how you join byzantine with stretchy to make purple "roses" on a black "vine". How is this different than a regular byzantine bracelet? Because the stretchy rings don't open.

Coil and cut your jump rings. I did mine on the blue dowel rod so they should be about 10mm.

Take one of the stretchy jump rings. I have the Darice 10mm ones in black. (Step 1)

Put two purple (exchange purple for whatever choice color you choose) jumprings through the black ring. (Step 2)

http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/ADD3966A-E897-47A1-B044-81B5649959FD-1646-0000016B78E0B866_zpsa0bd63bb.jpg?t=1348625712
Put two purple jumprings through the other two jump rings, but not through the black. (Step 3)


http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/B943955B-33EB-4079-BA36-843E92FD94FB-1646-0000016B7B7820AC_zpsd40abcec.jpg?t=1348625714
Separate the top two jump rings and lay them on opposite sides of the black ring. (Step 4)
http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/DCC59917-B078-4E91-BB3D-1C9252225887-1646-0000016B7F192B6B_zpscda86a16.jpg?t=1348625716 http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/E49FA296-FC3C-4E0C-9BB3-A4DF9D6A898F-1646-0000016B81B6F81B_zps54b2e1a3.jpg?t=1348625718

http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/EFE3BB30-A0A4-48A1-9C94-E8B87181055F-1646-0000016B844D9B77_zps66bfe1b8.jpgNow separate the other two purple jump rings so that the first two that are side by side with the black ring are now top again. (Step 5)

Open those two jump rings and insert a new black ring in them so that they are looped through it, then reclose the jump rings.  (Step 6)
http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/7F0A2A35-399C-420D-9AD7-3D7BE032475C-1646-0000016B86F99EB0_zps7568a45a.jpg http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/8B3B9805-2F1C-4539-BEC1-F453D7C8EA85-1646-0000016B89A9863F_zps445571ea.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/4DDFA64E-39BB-4824-B4CE-8298E7AB8A3C-1646-0000016B8C4B7A48_zpsd7d2e9c3.jpg

Now you're back at step one with a new black stretch ring.

http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/257368CA-BE75-44DE-836A-15213BF8D1F6-1646-0000016B8EDFFD2B_zps16231a64.jpg
Repeat steps 1-6 until you have the chain at the length you want.
http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/0B954E8B-D114-4DDB-AE33-A600C38736BF-1646-0000016B918D0E9C_zps7ac29c25.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/B37943CD-AC2E-424E-A68E-836358DB22A3-1646-0000016B9424248C_zps9dc4a5f9.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/CB2C2822-F7B2-48BB-8740-FB3FE93B4B11-1646-0000016B9AFEFDCA_zpsda4903f4.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/99945ACF-5FA5-4BA0-BA9B-50B3806498E0-1646-0000016B9D897861_zpsa7b53dd5.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/3D72C855-1E5B-4EEB-9A94-7BF88F502629-1646-0000016BA1164E64_zps717a865d.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/65AD422E-4E54-4CFF-9E64-7330BED6DADF-1646-0000016BA3B282EC_zps9fd986b8.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/ECE961A6-8709-4D5F-9D82-8342FCB81F79-1646-0000016BA6577B3C_zps248af8cb.jpg
I don't like my bracelets tight so I stop when the bracelet is actually at the length it takes to go around my wrist comfortably and not stretched at all. At this time I stop after I finish step 5.

http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/AEE42ADC-1003-4CA9-9695-C3B507CE2968-1646-0000016BAA2FB16A_zpsd74354c5.jpgInstead of step 6, you will now use the first jump ring that you started the process with instead of a new jump ring.

It's not very important that you have the chain line up exactly because it's going to twist on your arm. But if you're ocd about this stuff like I am, look at the chain and make sure the black rings are in a pattern of open, side, open, side, open, side.

If it starts with open you need to end it with a closed or vice versa if you're going to be all anal retentive about this.

Now that that first black stretch ring and the other end of your bracelet. Open the jump rings like you would have on steops 4 and 5 and insert the first black ring in them. On this last one, I find it easier to open both purple jump rings to insert the black on in so that don't drop the black side and mess up my straight line. http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/EF603FCF-3EEE-4BCC-B2DB-274A0E0B1588-1646-0000016BAE32D167_zpsda243d28.jpg

Now your bracelet should be done. http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/6A12A95C-635B-43A0-85A5-B703A13EA6E7-1646-0000016BB1C9BC93_zps6ae7725d.jpg

YAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

http://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/F4F2E33C-614C-476C-A199-AA72442B02D7-1646-0000016BBBFF15B2_zpsd5bf1423.jpghttp://i1158.photobucket.com/albums/p609/mamakweh/FA05CBD5-57A5-4C75-AC7D-8C09914390E6-1646-0000016BC0308D2C_zps3e98f37b.jpg

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

How to make jumprings- cheap

When I go to try out a new craft I have two things in mind
  1. How can I try this without spending a ton of cash?
  2. What are my options if I want to keep doing this?
When it came to chainmail I did a little research.

As usual, it's much cheaper to buy the wire and cut it yourself than it is to buy the jump rings pre-made. Duh.

So I googled how to coil the jumprings myself and found a ton of ways to do it. But there's also tools involved. Making them myself wasn't going to be as cheap as just buying my first pack of jumprings. But if I continued with it, they would be worth the investment.

At Hobby Lobby (I was in Texas at the time and they're everywhere) I tried to stick to rule #1, "make it as cheap as you can." Since I didn't know if I enjoyed the project yet, just get the basics... jumprings. I grabbed a bag of silver jumprings and headed towards the cash register.

But inside was only 120 jump rings. That's not a lot for 4$. What if I needed more? And what if I liked it? (This is the "not so bright" side of me that ends up getting herself into trouble.)

I ended up going back to the wire section and getting what I needed to make the rings.
So here's my notes from my first wire coiling experience and I'll show you how I've evolved from there. 

Wire
    https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/68717_141799675965954_1484251978_n.jpg
  •  The sites said to start out with aluminum wire. It's easier to bend than copper.
  • Hobby Lobby only had powder colored aluminum. (I'll get to why that's important to know about later.)
  • Most sites said to start with 18g. Hobby Lobby only had 16, 20, or 22. 20 and 22 are uber small so I had to go with 16. This worked out for me. 
  • Most wires come in 3 yard packs. Spools can go up to 10ft but they're copper.
Item to coil on
    https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/228951_141799839299271_226659956_n.jpg
  • The how-to sites all used a metal rod to roll their coil with. Hobby lobby didn't carry that. So I figured since I'm doing this cheap, lets go with dowel rods. They're literally like 40 cents. This is where I first learned that cheap isn't always easy at first, but I've actually stuck with these and I'm going to show you how to make this really easy.
  • Each rod has a color at the end of it to mark the size. My regular rod is a blue tipped and I grabbed a black rod for smaller rings. 
  • You can use a pen or something else that's hard and a tube if you're not worried about size but I didn't think of this until AFTER I bought supplies. 
Wire cutting tool
  • Hobby lobby only had wire snips... for flowers... Suckiest part of my first experiment with chainmail. But I bought them.
Shaping tool
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/548836_141804119298843_431221812_n.jpg
  • We had pliers at home :) So I didn't have to buy them. But they would have been 2$ there.
So cost of bag of 120 silver jump rings- 4$= 3 cents per jump ring.

Cost of making it myself- 3yrds of pink wire (2$), cutters (5$), 2 dowel rods (1$), and pliers (2$)=10$ 
That made 250 jump rings on the blue dowel rod = 4 cents each

BUT... that also gave me the supplies I needed to make more. So all I would need for the second batch of 250 jump rings was 2$ and less than 10 minutes worth of work.
2$ divided by 250= .08  That's less than a penny per jump ring. When you're dealing with over 100 jump rings, pennies add up. 
https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/457541_10150918962272856_178859382_o.jpg
What I made with jumprings I made myself
So if you're probably going to continue with this, invest in the tools.
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/s720x720/11768_10150905597932856_1841510780_n.jpg
Bracelet I made with store bought jump rings.

Have I bought more tools since then? Yes. Were they a little more expensive? Yes. But were they worth the investment? Yes. 

NOW WE GET TO WHAT YOU CAME HERE FOR.
I talk a lot. I know. 

So first you start with your wire. For your first project, start with aluminum, not copper. Aluminum is softer, easier to bend and work with. It doesn't hold up to a beating while worn like copper does, but it's easier to cut (especially with pinch cutters like flower cutters.)

But there are two different coloring techniques for wire that you need to take note of.

The first is powder coated wire. I hate it. I really do.  It's extremely soft and makes thicker jump rings. How? I don't know. But I find it harder to work with on a tight pattern. The color also cracks in the middle of the ring where it bends the most. And that color that cracked is now all over your hands when you coil it. The colors are much softer. I only use these when I working with something I want to look aged. 
The other wire "permanently colored". Remember making Easter eggs where you had to boil the water and shrink the plastic to fit the egg? That's what this kind reminds me of. The color almost stretches as you bend the wire. But if you do get a snag in it, it can peel off. But I wear my bracelets made of this daily and they don't look horrible like the powdered does. Darice is my favorite of the permanent colored brands. And it's always on sale at Joanne's for $1.25 for 3 yards. It's rare that it's not on sale there.
How do you know which is which? One has sharp bright colors (the good wire) and one has dull colors (the blah wire.) 
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/390506_141800059299249_22470437_n.jpg I use 16 gauge to make jump rings unless it's a connecting ring. The smaller the ring, the smaller gauge I use. 

Now you grab your dowel rod. I use the blue dot dowel rod. I don't have the measurements for it (because I pulled the info sticker off of it :( sorry) so I'm going to have to find that out and fix this later. JUST LOOK FOR THE BLUE DOT ON THE END. But for now, here is a picture of the sizes on a black dowel rod.

Loop the wire in the direction you tend to keep spinning it. As you spin it, you wan to have the sides of the wire touching. Make it just like the coil on one of those old door stoppers that makes the funny noise when you hit it. Tight coils. I find it's easier to guide with my thumb on my right hand so I usually loop from the back up and over to the front then under to the back. Pictures speak better than my words, sorry.  
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/548563_141802435965678_2121629287_n.jpghttps://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/224437_141802272632361_1929271332_n.jpghttps://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/395233_141802689298986_961037048_n.jpg

Because the dowel wood is soft, the wire will eventually hug it enough that you don't have to hold the end. But until it catches like that, you pretty much just have to hold the end with your left thumb and turn the rod and guide the wire with your right hand and thumb. Sounds hard, but it's really not. 

https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/252560_141803039298951_1769199865_n.jpg
It's still on the rod, but you can see I've already twisted some off
Continue to wind the wire around until you have about a half to full fists  length of coil. This part I've learned over time. The wood is soft and you have to twist this wire off eventually. While winding on wood makes it easier to wind, getting it off can be tricky. So at this point in the coil, I start to twist it off. I grip it with my left hand and twist the rod with my right. So the coil does not expand on me, I alternate the direction I'm twisting every time the wire starts to budge. If you're done at that length, be done. I usually only wind that much at a time so I don't have tons of unused jump rings and wire that I needed a different size. But if you want to keep going, put the last inch of that coil back on the dowel rod and continue winding, sliding it off every time you have a half fist length on the rod. Do you have to slide it off periodically? No. Is it a pain in the butt to try and get off if you don't? YES!

Now we cut the wire. I cut 3-4 rings off at a time depending on which cutters I use. There are three ways to cut. 
https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/417200_141804682632120_91436645_n.jpg
  1. Pinch cutters (top ring)
  2. Aviation snips (middle ring)
  3. Saw cut (bottom ring)
These provide different cuts in the link of the jump ring. 
Pinch cutters are exactly what they're named for: they pinch the wire till it breaks. This leaves you with a very gapped edge and makes it very easy for your jumprings to come apart from each other. You can also only cut about 1-2 rings at a time and still have to work at it to get them to cut through. This hurts my wrists a ton. But they're cheap (about 5$)and they work so if this is a project for you, give them a try. I know Joanne's will take them back if they don't work for you.  
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/399718_141803452632243_1477841058_n.jpg
What the tip of the aviation cutters look like (a bird beak)
https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/541298_141803299298925_901729781_n.jpg
My aviation cutters, easiest cut in the world
 Aviation snips are my favorite. They're what I use daily. They cut the ring in a way that you have to reshape it a little, but they provide the best cut without having to buy into the jump ring saws. Their cut is more of a slanted cut and the edges slide together pretty much perfectly. Every now and then you get a bent edge, but that's usually because you cut up too far in the coil and bent the next ring with the tip of your cutters. Aviation snips tend to run about 14$-24$ and you get them at a hardware store.

Saw cutters- never used, never will use. They're super expensive (anything over 100$ is super expensive for me) and tend to bur a lot.  Every saw cut package that I've bough has about 1/4 of the rings with horrible edges, and these are the ones I actually get from Joanne's (when they're on sale for 50 cents a pack because no one wants to buy crappy made items.)

Close the jumpring with your pliers and you're done. BUT if you've used aviation snips, you have a little extra work to do but it really doesn't take long at all after you get the hang of it. 
 Here's how I do it. 
I hold the jump ring with my left hand and use my pliers to make the two edges in line so the loop is flat but still has a gap. This will leave you with an egg shaped capital C. Now take the pliers and gently pinch the top down to the bottom edge, putting the pressure literally on the top corner you want to move into place. Walla, you're done. 
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/292875_141804465965475_525239323_n.jpghttps://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/284234_141804542632134_1621708643_n.jpg

I understand this is a really long blog, but I want you guys to notice the thought process that goes into it. The only things I've really changed are the types of cutters I use and my process to get the coil off the dowel rod, and sometimes I use a pen or hard straw to coil wire around.

While I have other items that I use to make the jewelry (round nose pliers, stuff for making paper beads or accessories to put on the wire) my investment into this wasn't much and I still made some pretty awesome stuff with my cheap pinch cutters and the wire I hate to use. 
https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/464957_10150918964912856_639715090_o.jpghttps://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/532823_10150922879402856_1593078281_n.jpghttps://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/s720x720/538851_10150908462792856_1881340190_n.jpghttps://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/412099_10150918717602856_201674176_o.jpg


   So go out and have fun with this. Don't break the bank trying to make something pretty. Do a few, learn, get better, learn more, google, come back here and find a few patterns, and be crafty. But never feel you have to buy the super duper blahblah4000 to be good at a craft. Someone had to make that craft before someone had to think to make the blahblah4000. Am I right? Of course I am!

Monday, September 24, 2012

Paper bead and chainmail bracelet


I saw this

and I liked it!
But I make these

Sunshine Circles
Maiden's Bandolier
Daisies in my Heart
Chainmail Oragami


So my brain gears started working and I decided I don't have to just stick to Chaimail. I can incorporate other things into it also. Then I started looking around and googling how to do these. That's when I figured it's about time to start sharing how I make what I make. Why? Because it's not secret info. It's all over the web. Google "How to make chainmail." I dare you. Some of the stuff where I though "This is MY idea. I'm so awesome!" I found had been done over and over again by others. I wasn't as smart as I thought'dd I was. So there's no reason I shouldn't just share with you how it's done so you can do it also.
Will this slow down my sales? Probably not. I barely sell as it is. But the people that DO buy are usually people that want it do be done. And if this encourages someone who normally would have bought to make it instead, kudos to them for giving this a try. 
I also want you guys to see what a crafter does when she doesn't have every little fun gadget. Crafting doesn't have to be super duper expensive. I do things the ghetto way. And guess what? It still makes something pretty. 
 
NOW ONTO THE TASK AT HAND!

Day 1 

Ok, I'm not going to act like I'm pro at the beads. Why? Because I know I'm doing it wrong. I'm pretty sure I'm the only person who involves an allen wrench into rolling a paper bead. 
But here's how I did mine today.

 I took a magazine that I wasn't reading but hadn't thrown out. I paid over 3$ for it. Either I read it 20 times or I re-use it. I ripped out pages that were colorful or solid, but not a lot of words. Then I cut those pages into triangular strips. I used one triangle as a template for the others so they were all the same length but you don't have to. For this project you need the beads to be the same length though, so make sure the tops (where you first start cutting and angle down in a triangle) are all as wide as each other. Fatness, don't worry about it unless you're all OCD like that. If you want them skinny, shorter strips. If you want them fatter, longer strips.
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/s720x720/223101_141025779376677_1445250535_n.jpg 

Most websites say use a toothpick or a bead roller to roll the beads with. This is an awesome idea because it makes sure the centers are all the same diameter and it's much easier to roll it. But I don't have either of those and I'm impatient. So I rolled them myself. I found it was easier to bend the top at about the length I wanted the diameter of the hole to be. Then I rolled it again and it started to roll on its own. HINT: To pull tight, hold the ends of the bead with your thumb and pointer finger then pull the unrolled portion of the paper. You want your grip on the bead ends tight enough that it doesn't unroll the whole thing but not so tight that you end up bending the bead. You'll still end up with bent ends though and need to reshape the middle :( But you're going to be smarter than I am and use a toothpick or bead roller right? RIGHT?!?!
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/206320_141023446043577_1809726883_n.jpg https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-prn1/562060_141023729376882_1044450625_n.jpg   
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/189308_141023866043535_1632624159_n.jpgWhen I had about maybe a half inch tail I ran some elmer's glue over the length of the bead. Then I continued rolling until the entire bead was rolled up and had a thin layer of glue.
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc7/385738_141024136043508_1602692204_n.jpgBecause I did a lot of tightening and I was chasing my kids around the house periodically, I had bent ends on some of my beads. For this, I stuck in the allen wrench. It didn't grip the paper to roll it, but it did a great job of resetting my inner tube. I did this when the glue was still a little wet so when it would set right. This allen wrench will also come in handy when I glaze the beads. If the edges aren't straight enough for you, you can take scissors and cut the corners on the tips. 
For some of you, this may be the end of the bead making part. But I don't think that's a wise idea. Is the bead hard enough to thread or use now? Yes. But get it wet even once and you will have a soggy mess. So now you need to glaze it. A lot of people online are using clear nail polish. I hate the smell of nail polish. I'm weird. I know. So I'm going to invest a little into these beads (the magazine was something I already had) and use some Judi-Kin's Diamond Glaze.

Day 2 
(1.5 hours of actual work as a beginner at this: bead part only)

I didn't get to buy the diamond glaze :( I know. I'm all sad faced too. I went to Joanne's Fabrics and after about 20 min of no help from the 3 women I asked, I decided to dollar store it. I needed toothpicks anyways right? So there I found a bottle of clear quick dry nail polish. Maybe it's just because it was from the dollar store.. but I'm not happy with it. Even when it's dry, you can't have the beads around each other with moisture in the air. I live in Portland, Oregon, there's ALWAYS moisture in the air here. But I'll get more into that later and show you guys how to do it with the nail polish since glaze will be pretty similar but with better results. 
K, so I took one of my beads and I stabbed it with a toothpick. Just kidding, I carefully inserted the toothpick into the already made hole. I don't want anyone going all crazy on this and ruining one of their beads and pointing a finger at me. 
I took a video of the next part but it didn't turn out well. I took the nail polish and put one coat of it over the bead. I went across it long ways. (1) Then I put it in the side of cardboard to dry while I did the first coat on the rest. Most sites tell you to use a foam pad. I had the fun cocktail toothpicks and no foam so the side of cardboard worked for me. Once those were dry I put a second coat on in the opposite direction as the first coat. Why? Because the paper is rolled so going across both ways smooths it out.
When I was finished, I ended up with all of these.
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/c67.0.403.403/p403x403/185208_141464309332824_1296935970_n.jpg
 I did my best to make sure none of them touched but sometimes they did. (This is probably why my ghetto cardboard is not as good as foam.) So sometimes I ended up with this: 
It's an easy fix though. Pull them apart, smooth down the sticky stuff with your fingers, let them dry fully, then give them one more coat of polish or glaze. 
Now you can be done. Your beads are finished! 
But if you love wire like I do, you're not finished yet.

This next part is pretty easy, but if you don't measure things out like I do, it's kind of a trial and error the first 2-3 times. Then you get the hang of it. 


https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/c0.0.403.403/p403x403/228123_141464495999472_1693893949_n.jpgThe wire I use is 20 gauge copper with a colored finish on it. It's Darice brand. I love their copper and their aluminum is less soft (so it doesn't always unbend on you) than most other brands. I get it at Joanne's fabrics. It's pretty much always on sale. 

https://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/558691_141464772666111_935688101_n.jpgPut the bead on the end of the wire. Do not cut it off the coil yet. Now take some round nose pliers (this is something you will need to buy if you want to use wire in jewelry and it's very much worth the investment). Roll a loop on the tip of the wire. This is where you will connect it to jump rings or earings or other items. A good sized loop takes about the length of the tip of your pinky (unless you have doll hands and in that case I'm jealous and no longer like you. In this case, use the tip of your ring finger, jerkface.) Once you have that loop, press the bead up to the edge of it, and measure out another pinky tip of wire. Now you cut it off the wire coil. Loop this edge. 
 Ending result?
Ok that was a few of my ending result. I did about 40 of them. 

AND AFTER ADDING IN MY OWN CHAINMAIL TOUCH
https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-snc6/224503_141489315996990_1468959827_n.jpghttps://sphotos-b.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/c67.0.403.403/p403x403/548408_141465215999400_1571100842_n.jpg 

https://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash4/5045_141489939330261_1629601992_n.jpg
https://ny-image3.etsy.com/002/0/6959900/il_570xN.378495699_tj1a.jpg And just in case you love me lots...
This bracelet is up for sale on Etsy.
You can also find me on Facebook if you ever want to see what else I'm up to. I won't always post my creations up on here and some of them are already made so I won't be doing how to's on them.