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!

The making of the Coral Fan Crown

The making of the coral fan crown in Sterling Silver for Sirena via the lost wax casting method. First I made rubber molds of coral branches, then I took wax impressions from those molds and cut and fused together the coral parts into various combinations. Assembled into a fan crown, crossed my fingers, and hoped that it would turn out in metal. And it did!

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Sirena Emerges From the Sea

New costumed porcelain doll available for sale in July. Get in touch with me by email if you're interested (address in bio). I tried some new things with this doll, one of which was submerging her in salt water for this photoshoot. I got more awesome photos coming from the depths. .

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Quarantine Diary 9

Netflix and molds. This is the last stage of my new costumed doll that I've been working on for the past two months since quarantine began. I'm injecting modular components of her costume for lost wax casting while binge watching Ripper Street. I love problem solving to a backdrop of crime solving (already burned through Murdoch Mysteries TWICE!)

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