New year, new state/city/house, fresh start on my business,
my blog and my homeschool. (Not
necessarily in that order.)
It’s been nearly a year since my last tutorial here so I
figured I’d better make this one awesome.
I don’t know whether this cane fits the bill or not, but I had a lot of
fun designing it. I’m using the website
Days of the Year to help me find themes for my blog posts and for this week my
inspiration was
“Argyle Day” on January 8th. I love geometric shapes
and patterns and this one looked like a simple but fun challenge to start the
year off with. Hopefully you can find
something fun to do with this cane.
This tutorial assumes you know the basics of polymer clay
caning – conditioning, shaping, cane reduction, etc.
Tools Needed:
Flexible Tissue Blade
Pasta Machine
Acrylic Roller
Supplies Needed:
1 oz each of four colors polymer clay
½ oz of a fifth color for the flower centers
½ oz black or white clay for the stitches
(amounts are approximate)
Instructions:
Condition all of your colors of clay. I am using purple, yellow, teal, orange, pink
and black for the stitches.
Roll the fifth color of clay (the ½-oz one) into log for
the center of your flowers.
Roll your petal color into a long snake and cut into 8
equal pieces. Adjust the thickness of
them to fit around the center log.
Pack the areas between the petals with wedges of the
color you will be using for the flower backgrounds. I always overpack and trim the excess.
Trim the excess to get something as round as possible to
minimize distortion of the flower.
This looks pretty good.
Wrap the cane in a couple of sheets of thick clay.
Mark a square with your blade on one end of the
cane. Make the marks line up with the
petals as shown. You will want to leave
a little of the background clay around the petals closest to the edges, but not
too much.
If you are lacking a little (or a lot of) clay at the
corners, add some pieces.
Trim the cane into a square.
Reduce the cane to ½ its original width (twice the
length)...
...trim the ends and cut it in half.
With your remaining two colors (not including the black
or white), make square logs the same size and shape as your flower canes.
Arrange your four logs as shown, with the two flower
canes touching at the inside corners.
Compress well and reduce slightly.
Cut the cane into three pieces as shown, getting as
close to the middle of each section as possible.
Roll out a sheet of black or white clay as thin as you
can. (I used setting 7 on my
Atlas.)
Cut a strip as wide as the length of your cane. Cut the end even. Cut a narrow strip of clay from the end...
...and while lifting the blade just barely off the work
surface, pull it toward you so the tiny strip of clay stays attached to the
blade. (You can use your fingers but
leaving it on the blade will make the next step easier.)
Lay the strip
close to the edge of one of the smaller chunks of clay you cut off the cane
earlier.
Repeat until you
have covered the entire cut side in strips of black or white clay stripes. (Make sure your stripes are going the length
of the cane, not the width – they will lay the same direction as the stripes
that resulted from cutting the flower in half.)
Lightly roll over the stripes with your acrylic roller
to compress them into the base a little.
Stick the piece
back to your cane with the stripes inside.
Repeat the above steps on the other cut part of the
cane so you have to rows of “stitching” in your cane. Compress it well. Now rotate the
cane 45 degrees and make two cuts perpendicular to the first two.
Add the stripes as before. Reassemble your cane and reduce it a little.
You can reshape
the square into a diamond now and then reduce the diamond-shaped cane, or you
can reduce it square and then reshape.
Either way, both reduce and reshape.
And there you have a really fun cane that would be
great for covering eggs or Christmas ornaments or whatever strikes your fancy.
I covered a pen with it.
You can also
make argyle without the flowers and with fewer colors. Here I used two colors – plum and a pale sage
green. Make two blocks of each and press
them into a four-square checkerboard pattern...
...make the cuts...
...add the stripes, turn, repeat...
...reduce and reshape.
Use it to make something creative.
(I haven’t used this one yet.)
I would love to see what you come up with!
Enjoy!
Korrina