Saturday, July 20, 2013

Cookie Tin Cutup


I scored this incredible Chinese cookie tin at a yard sale last week.  It is gorgeous:  plum
and red with bands of yellow and green and frolicking babies, some with musical instruments, others with fruit and fans.  Usually I think simply cutting out graphics and displaying them as jewelry elements is not so interesting, but these just beg for that treatment.  So, out with the 7/0 sawblades and narrow frame saw, beeswax and reading glasses -- I'm cutting them out, still not certain how I will use them.  And the exercise of working in a batch has improved my tin-sawing skills quite a bit.  I have some hints to share with you:
  • Use a 7.0 sawblade, the kind with a rounded back, so it will turn curves easily.  Sure, they are not much bigger than a strand of hair, but they have alot of teeth to attack that thin tin.
  • If you push the saw frame, you will break the blade, so you need a light touch.  I find that if I avoid over-gripping the saw, holding it with fingers curled just enough to hold onto it, that helps.
  • Tip the saw at a slight angle while allowing it to do the work, keeping hand and arm relaxed.  As you approach a corner, tilt the blade upright and saw in place before turning.
  • Beeswax, soap, or a product sold for the purpose helps to lubricate the blade.  Don't use too much.
  • Any vibration of the tin interferes with cutting, so use the smallest slot of your benchpin to support the work.
  • It helps to use a 2B pencil to draw a line where you want to cut.  Then, as you cut look at that line.  This will help your accuracy a whole lot.
Because the tin is quite thin, after deburring the edges with a riffle file, I like to collage some paper onto the back.  This is a fun way to carry the theme and add interest to the back, as well as beef up the thin material.  Here I used a page from an old kanji script herbal.

I am not sure just what will happen to all these jolly babies, but a minute ago I discovered an old glass tube that formerly held a Chinese remedy, complete with label and waxed cork.  Hmmmmm . . . . . .

Here's a first effort though -- a pair of earrings with mercury glass bugle bead tassels.



And I just happened to have a bill of hell money for the back.  It's the "Last Gig in the Forbidden City."  They're playing a flute and an oboe of some kind. 




6 comments:

  1. How fun! What a great score! Love the earrings.

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  2. What a score! You saw, you bought, you saw. I've only ever cut it out with snips, probably more exacting the way you do it.
    Delightful little wonders!

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  3. and here i just cut with snips and shears!

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  4. If you want a compound outline and greater detail without deforming the metal, a jeweler's saw is the answer.

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  5. looks hard and painful.
    turned out real cute.

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  6. Not hard at all, and with my skier's thumb sprain, much easier than cutting with snips, and more accurate!

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