Monday 31 August 2015

Buttons, buttons, buttons...

I've been on a button making kick lately.  
Teeny tiny work for the most part, so I just sit down and lose myself in it.
Here's what's new: 










My hope was to have them ready and listed in time for all those holiday gift-makers who have already started their Christmas knits.  I've seen your ambitious lists!  You go for it, my friends.

Incidentally, if you are not a knitter, or crocheter, you can still personalize a store bought piece to make it "yours" with the quick addition of a little somethin' somethin'.

Slowly but surely, I'm adding these (and a few more even) to my etsy shop

Linking up today with my friends at:
Frontier Dreams for Keep Calm Craft On

Thursday 27 August 2015

Peony Prototype

I have been meaning to make a peony shaped votive candle holder for over a year now.  The prototype came out of the kiln last night, and I'm thrilled with the result.

I've been intrigued by the Victorian's "language of flowers" for years, and found out that the peony is for "happiness in marriage".  I'm thinking it might make a great wedding gift.

This one was the prototype but there will definitely be more (mostly because I really really want to see a whole row of them lit along the center of my dining table).

 This is the side view. 

And the "work in progress" picture.

Being the prototype, this particular one won't be up in my etsy shopbut these hosta leaf ones were listed today.  Incidentally, hostas mean "devotion" in the language of flowers.


Tuesday 25 August 2015

Building an earth oven

The background:  Some of you may know that we have a second piece of property.  It's where we plan to eventually retire, but right now it's very "roughin' it".  We cook over an open fire (or a camp stove if it's pouring rain).  There is no running water (unless the waterfall is flowing), no clean water at all actually, no hydro, and a very minimal sleep cabin with four bunks.  What it does have is peace, quiet, birds and wildlife, and potential.  I decided an earth oven may give us a few more cooking options, and over our visits there this summer, I set about building one.

This book has great step by step instructions on building your own, and I used it thoroughly.

Here's my adventure:

First you build a foundation of rocks so the moisture can't get up into your oven (see picture above).  I chose not to use mortar as this is the trial oven, and I was intending to build it with just what was available.  The space in between the rocks is filled with ash from the fire pit.  In hindsight, this may not have been the best idea.  The book says to use rubble, but the ash MAY let moisture in.  We'll know next year.

Collect your materials.  I built mine over a period of about 2 months, so it wasn't that exhausting.  Still very hard work if you are out in the wilderness and have to bring everything in uphill.

Next, you make a dome of sand - this will be the size of the interior of the oven - so mine will be big enough for one small loaf or a personal size pizza, or something of that size.  Cover it with wet paper to act as a barrier, and then add a 3" layer of "building mud".  Those beer bottles are part of the insulation layer.  There is also a layer under the dome, but I forgot to take that picture.

All of those pails are my building materials.  You'll need clay, sand, water, and a clay-based mud.

That big blue bag was my mixing bag at first, as I was only able to handle small batches at a time.  You can also use a tarp, and mix with your feet, but I was getting filthy enough as it was.

Keep adding your "building mud" until you have a nice thick layer over your whole dome.

Once it's dry on the outside, you take all the sand back out of the interior.  I lit a fire to dry out the inside so I could add the next layer right away.

Then comes the insulation layer - sawdust mixed with clay slip - good thing I know a potter :).  This is half of mine.  I did it in two parts as we ran out of sawdust on that trip and I had to wait for the next batch of dead trees to be chainsawed.

Next trip: I added the rest of the insulation layer, and the final coat.
My finish coat was clay slip mixed with sand, and of all things...cattail fluff.  It was the best fibrous material I could think of that could be had in abundance where we were.

It still needs a door, so that I can bake in it.
Now the test is...will it still be in one piece when we get to back up to try it out?

Linking up today with my friends at:
Keep Calm Craft On over at Frontier Dreams - though I'm not 100% sure this qualifies as a "craft".
Wildcrafting Wednesday


Wednesday 12 August 2015

Work in progress...

I've been working away at some products that will be available in September.

Cookie stamps, buttons, magnets, beads, and some surprises,

I've got loads and loads of things drying/dried on trays, and then I realized I better make some bigger things to fill the kiln.  Maybe I need to actually get a smaller kiln?