Knotted Earrings 2 (2010)
Sterling silver, iolite
Constructed, cold-joined
L 2.5 cm x W 0.7 cm (L 0.98″ x W 0.275″)
My life is all about choices: if I choose to focus on one area of my life, another area gets sacrificed. For the past few weeks, I’ve had to focus on some group endeavours, and so my work on YOJ projects ground to a halt. I’m working towards finding balance, but haven’t found it just yet.
For this week’s project, my focus was on making bridal jewellery. My thoughts were on “something blue” and “tying knots”.
The Monkey’s Fist is a classic macramé knot, usually used as a weight or ornament on the end of a rope. Tying them in rope is relatively easy. When I learned it as a child, it was just a matter of sticking a marble between two fingers, and wrapping the rope around the marble and fingers, then around the marble through fingers and then through the loops created by the fingers. Then the loops were pulled tight.
In wire, the stiffness of the metal, and its tendency to kink makes tying challenging. There is also the issue of trying to get the proportions right: thinner gauge wire is more flexible to tie, but the knot becomes very small and fiddly. I found it impossible to tie wire around a bead without it slipping all over the place. Pulling the loops tight at the end was also a non-starter, so I had to make the initial wraps as close to round as possible – challenging since without a bead in the centre, the tendency is to wrap ovals. I ended up creating an invent-a-tool to help.
It took a bit of practice to get consistent results (doesn’t everything?), but I did end up with a satisfying “knot”. To get the “blue” part of the earrings, I decided on adding some pale 2 mm iolites. I would love to try these in a larger gauge of wire, but I think that would really only be possible with fine silver. Sterling just gets too stiff too fast.
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