Tiny Flowers

Been making lots of tiny flowers, from tiny glass beads, for a tiny flower crown. And I need many more, because I intend to overdo this crown. Moderation is just not my cup of tea, it seems. Creative impulse calls, and I have to answer.

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Evolution of the Wax Tuvstarr Crown, Backwards

Before it was cast in Sterling Silver. This crown was a one of a kind wax sculpture, which I hand-built, carved, constructed, melted, cut, and joined out of soft injection wax, over the course of 200 hours. I free-styled the construction, meaning that I worked straight from my imagination and instincts, without a drawing or a planned design. I let the crown evolve and grow itself under my tools from hour to hour, day to day, week to week.

 
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The soft pink injection wax is a good medium for this type of construction, even though technically it’s not formulated for carving or sculpture. It’s designed for injecting very fine and highly detailed molds, with a very low melting point and low viscosity.

But I found that these same characteristics that make soft pink wax bad carving, tend lend themselves really well to my sculpting style and methods, as I seem to have a fixation on making tiny granulation spheres. Most of my work, both metal and textile, features hundreds or thousands of spheres.

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I was very nervous about this crown coming out in casting, as there is always a danger of losing a one of a kind piece, worth hundreds of hours of work, during the very last stage of production. Variables such as air bubbles, metal impurities, centrifugal force and temperature fluctuations, can easily ruin a metal cast and destroy everything you built.

 
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It’s always exciting to hold the final, finished metal cast in my hand and know that this object that used to be nothing more but a thought in my head, is now a physical object.

It went from an electrical impulse in my brain, to being a material presence in the universe... quite literally a dream come true, and that’s pretty magical to me!