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I Think a Customer’s Gallery Would be Interesting

I am going to get started on a Customer’s Gallery.

Send me a photo, a nice big one, and information on the item. I will create a thumbnail and add it to the gallery with your information, and if you wish, a link to your site where they can purchase the item.

I am going to build the framework for the gallery and send out emails to my online customers.

You can jump the gun on this and send me:

Photo

Description of the item.

Your name.

And if you like: Your web site name, it’s URL and the price of the item. Go to the Contact Us tab at the top of this page.

Steve
Here it is:
Click here to go to the Customer’s Gallery

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Wire Wrap Ring DVD Now Available as Online Video

Announcing an Online solution for our friends in Europe and Australia. Also, outrageous shipping costs to Canada(and tariffs) have kept them away until now.

Our DVD is now available for viewing Online. Read more about that Here.

Until now, customers outside the United States were unable to get our Wire Wrapped Ring DVD.
(More Information and Preview Here)

As a streaming video, I will provide you with a personalized Username and Password, to access a secure page. Two options are available there. If you have a recent version of Windows Media Player, (available for free at Microsoft’s Download Site) you can enter your Username and Password and it will start streaming as soon as it buffers, usually a few seconds. The other option is to plug a link into your own Video Player. Depending on the player, the video may have to completely download to begin, making the streaming version a better option.

It plays straight through, allowing pausing along the way. Once it completes, you can back up and replay selected areas. Your Username and Password will remain active, so you can replay it several times. It is copyrighted material, so you can not give away or sell your Username and Password.

You must have a Cable or DSL connection to the Internet to use this. A Dial-up connection would take days to view the DVD. As with all of our products, your satisfaction is guaranteed with a no quibble refund. After the purchase, email will be sent to the buyer at the email address provided to PayPal which will contain all of the information needed to view the video.

Steve

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Got Glue? What if you Want to Stick Metal to Glass?

Eventually you will need to glue some glass or stone to metal. Our wire wrap jewelry is made without the use of adhesives, but that is not all we do.We experimented with several brands and types but there is only one you need when the bond must not fail. We used to use E6000, and it is a great product. It was likely our technique that aided the occasional failure, but fail it did, on a tiny percentage of the items we sold. It is fast to use and it was how we attached earring posts to glass dots.

A few years ago we discovered Triolyse. It comes with an activator, the bigger bottle (14ml) and the adhesive (10ml). How much is that you ask? Well, it is two teaspoons. At around $20, it is expensive, but a little goes a long ways. Most stained glass and fused glass suppliers carry it. My last kit came from eBay and cost around $23 shipped.

It is a UV cure adhesive that uses an Activator to cure. The instruction say to paint a thin coat of activator on one side, up to 4 hours in advance of applying the adhesive. Then you apply a dot of adhesive, one big enough to mash out to cover the entire area to be bonded. You hold together for 30 seconds and set it to cure for 24 hours. The cure is shortened to 30 minutes at 150F. We use tiny spring loaded clamps to hold the items together for many objects, speeding up the process.

We listened to others and now apply the Activator to both sides. We use a lamp with a reflector to incubate the items being cured.

When the bond absolutely, positively must not fail, get some of this stuff.

Steve

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How to Purchase Metal for Wire Wrap Projects

The most common questions we get on the subject of purchasing metal are the big ones.

1) What do I get?

2) Where do I get it.

The second one is answered quickly. I get my silver and gold filled from two places, Monsterslayer and Rio Grande:
Monsterslayer
Rio Grande
Get the wire coiled, but with Rio Grande, you sometimes have to specify Coiled or it comes on a tight spool.

Now, what do I get. Don’t use silver or gold plated, it won’t hold up to wear. If price is forcing you to look at silver plated, consider copper or brass instead. I only use Sterling Silver and Gold Filled. The specific Sterling Silver I use is Argentium Silver. It has the same silver content as traditional Sterling Silver (92.5%) but replaces some of the remaining components with Germanium. It greatly reduces tarnishing.

Gold Filled is a great product. Unlike gold plated, Gold Filled has a layer of gold bonded to brass and holds up well to wear. It comes in 10k, 12k and 14k, depending where you get it. Usually you see the product described a 1/20th, 14k Gold Filled. That means that 1/20th the weight of the metal is the gold component, the remainder being the brass core.

We use several sizes of metals. For most projects we use 21 Gauge Square wire, Half Hard. For tiny pieces we use 24 gauge. Where practical, we wrap the bundles in the same wire. We also wrap bundles in 16 or 18 gauge Half Round wire, also purchased Half Hard. Ring shanks get wrapped in 21 gauge Half Round wire.

For ornate projects we use Dead Soft wire, but it is hard to handle and easy to kink and twist. It is difficult to make a ring using Dead Soft wire.

The math on Gold Filled: Lets start with one Troy Ounce of 1/20th, 14k Gold Filled and ferret out the gold component.  A Troy Ounce is 31.1 grams. Since it is 1/20th, that takes the gold component down to 1.575 grams. Since 14k  gold is 58% gold that takes the weight of the gold down to 0.9135 grams, or 2.94% of a Troy Ounce. Today, (5-26-2009) gold is $959 a Troy Ounce which makes the gold component worth $28.17. Monsterslayer had one Troy Ounce of 1/20th, 14k Gold Filled 21 gauge square, today at $53.65 for small quantities.

Steve

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What Do You Want to Learn About Wire Wrap?

If you are struggling with an aspect of a new hobby or trying to learn something that is important to your livelihood, overcoming problems is very important. Susie and I have been doing wirewrap for many years, and the primary objective of this blog is to help others learn to wire wrap. This is where you come in.

Let us cut to the chase; what problems are you having and what information do you want to know about? No sense waiting to see if we cover the issue in a subsequent article, just ask.

Click on the Add Your Comments link at the bottom of this post and ask questions. Susie and I will help if we can, or tell you if we can’t.

Steve

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We Have a Drawer Full of Side Cutters, That’s Expensive

We have been doing wire wrapping for many years and have ended up with a drawer full of side cutters. They range from under $7 to around $45 in price. There seems to be two themes, the $7-$10 range and the over $40 range. The cutters in the middle don’t offer much advantage, and for my money, $10 or less will get you what you need, read on.

When I reach for a cutter I head for only a couple pairs, depending what I am cutting. For wire wrap, I head to my Value Series Cutter or my 5″ Flush Diagonal Cutters.

If I am cutting something hard, I have some cheap cutters purchased in the 1970s. They cut memory wire and are used on projects around the house.

If you want a near-perfect cut, you are going to have to spend $45+ on a cutter, as I did. Did I mention I broke mine the first day I had them. They had a fine cutting edge that was no match for my smooth touch.

Now, I don’t worry about the tiny blip in the middle of the cut wire. If it is an issue I hit it with a file.

Where it is a big issue is with ear wires. We sell a lot of earrings and the ear wire is sometimes part of the design. (If it is not, we use ear wires from Rio Grande.)

You can not get away with simply cutting the end you poke through your ear, leaving it untreated. We used to carefully file it down to a rounded point. That was hit and miss. Then we discovered Cup Burs. They are a small bit that is used in a rotary tool. They are sized to match different wire gauges. We now keep a cup bur for each of the wire sizes we commonly use.

You cut your wire and stick the cut end into the cup and turn on the rotary tool, a perfect end every time.

Get a decent pair of side cutters and spend a few dollars on a selection of cup burs.

Steve

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Copper Electroforming Anodes and Round Copper Wire

We have added two new products to our product line. We now sell Copper Electroforming Anodes and 18 gauge Round Copper Wire.

Our Electroformed beads and cabochons have been a big hit in Galleries. I got tired of paying $4.50 each so I bought a big enough quantity to enable us to offer them at $1.50 each. They are a bit thinner, but at a 66% discount, the slightly thinner anode is a good value.

We also started carrying round copper wire in 18 gauge. We offer this in 10 foot lengths for $2.95. This wire can be used for many wire jewelry projects and as hangers and baskets for Electroforming. It is also a great size for jump rings.

Copper Anode

Click Here for Copper Wire & Anodes

Steve

One response so far

Soaring Metal Prices and What it Costs to Wire Wrap

In the past week, two customers inquired about metals. One was concerned about the soaring price of Sterling Silver and the other curious about how much wire you get per Troy Ounce.

This is based upon a spot price of sterling at $14.52 a Troy Ounce.

Here is the length of of wire per Troy Ounce for various gauges:
21 Ga Square Sterling Silver has 20 feet per ounce, around $1.08 per foot
21 Ga Square 14kt Gold Filled has 22.2 feet per ounce, around $2.48 per foot

16 Ga Half Round Sterling Silver has 15.4 feet per ounce, around $1.39 per foot
16 Ga Half Round 12kt Gold Filled has 17.9 feet per ounce, around $2.73 per foot

22 Ga Half Round Sterling Silver has 55.6 feet per ounce, around $ .39 per foot
22 Ga Half Round 12kt Gold Filled has 69.9 feet per ounce, around $ .70 per foot

monsterslayer.com

Remember that Monsterslayer and Rio Grande repurchase any scrap metal. They pay 75% of the Spot price of the metal towards a metal purchase. The price you pay for Sterling and Gold filled is a combination of the Spot price plus the fabrication cost of the metal. This morning the spot price of sterling was $14.52 and 21 Square wire was $21.52, so there is a $7 fabrication cost.

A ring with 8 bundle wrap wires in Sterling Silver would cost around $7.50 to make. That would include two bundle wrap wires and the wire to cover the shank.

Say you get it finished and it is terrible, just cut out the cabochon and add it to your scrap container. When you get a bit in the container, send it back for trade to Monsterslayer:
Scrap

They give you 75% of the Spot price of the metal as trade for new wire. 75% of the spot price is $10.89 an ounce. It only takes about 1/3 ounce to make a ring, or about $7.50 worth of sterling. The trade in value of that .33 ounces is around $3.60. So for $7.50 you have a sterling ring, or you spent $3.90 practicing if you wreck it.

Steve

3 responses so far

Accepting Credit Cards, Safely

If you have an online business, I would recommend you do as we have done and start accepting credit cards via PayPal. We have done this for several reasons.

First, a merchants account where you accept credit cards, is expensive. They charge a monthly fee, plus transaction fees. The transaction fees are usually about what PayPal charges without the monthly fees.

Secondly, we did not want anything to do with dealing with handling customer’s credit cards. One of our favorite online retailers was hacked and hundreds of customers’ credit cards were compromised. It was a nightmare for them, and they still feel the aftermath of that horror story.

PayPal lets you easily print a shipping label and packing slip. We use two-up Avery Labels so addressing packages is painless. The shipping label includes postage, so no need for a trip to the Post Office. The postage is deducted from your PayPal balance as a separate transaction, so shipping costs are easily tracked for tax purposes. PayPal can be set up to notify the buyer of the shipment.

We use Mals eCommerce, a free shopping cart. They have an easy interface to PayPal.

We use USPS Priority Mail, so the boxes are provided for free by the USPS. PayPal also has a link so we can schedule a USPS carrier pickup.

Get your account and start today:

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.

Steve

2 responses so far

Show Tents- What You Don’t Know May Blow You Away

We finally decided to join the show circuit (circa 1996) which required, among other things, a Show Tent. So we started going to shows to see what different vendors used. There seemed to be two general classes of tent, easy to put up and not so easy, so we figured there must be some trade-offs. This turned out to be the case, with several trade-offs to consider.

If it is easy to put up:
Pros:
Light weight
Usually can be erected by one person.
Inexpensive
Setup and tear-down can be done quickly

Cons:
Big wind can move them more easily.
If anchored against big wind, it can be more easily destroyed.

If harder to put up:
Pros:
Less likely to blow away in a big wind.
It will take big winds if anchored properly.

Cons:
Heavy
Expensive
Will likely require more than one person for at least part of the setup
Setup and tear-down a bigger effort

After talking with several vendors we decided to go with an Archtop. We got the side screens, top window and side flaps. Total cost around $1000. We used it for dozens of shows where we sold wire wrapped jewelry and my beads. We also, during our 5 years on the road in an RV, erected it in front of our bus to use as a studio for the summer. It worked great for that. When I was working on developing a signature bead, we rented a tank of liquid oxygen to run my torch. The tent was a great studio for the RV park. We used it every day for the months we were in Duluth. We anchored it down with ground augers, the kind you screw into your back lawn to keep Fido confined to an area.

I was listening to the radio one day and the weather bulletin advised of a rapidly moving front approaching with 80 MPH winds. Yikes, I called the RV park owner and went to my tent where I tied the 700 pound liquid oxygen tank to the tent structure for a little extra support. Good thing, the 80 MPH winds hit and our tent strained but stayed save and in place. The RV down wind was not confident that it would and moved. He had a $600,000 rig with a paint job that had to be $50k, so I was a bit relieved to see him move too.

Shows are a better test of what you need in a tent. Either way you go, it needs to be white. Some shows require white, but on a practical note, get white just because of problems from the color cast given off by blue tents. Inside of a blue tent you can not properly judge colors, and if customers try on an item and look in a mirror, the blue cast will suck the life out of their skin tone. Nobody like looking like Morticia from the Addams Family.

The side screens were wonderful for allowing air flow while controlling access to the space.  They also come with canvas covers that Velcro on the inside so you have a secure tent at night or to control the sun or wind.  Our front flap was divided in three pieces that zip and each could be rolled up to the top.  This allowed you to control traffic flow.  The one part we never used was the back awning.  This gives you extra covered backspace for processing and storage.

We were caught up in several situations where big winds hit our show. One danger of having a flimsy or unanchored tent is having it do damage to others property. If your tent rips through a booth stuffed with expensive art, you could run up quite a tab.

There are several ways to anchor tents, we have seen some clever systems. Most of the time you will not be able to use ground anchors, you will be in a street or parking lot. If you are on turf, use the Fido ground augers.

We used 4′ long pieces of 6″ PVC pipe filled with concrete with an Eye Bolt stuck in the top. These weighed a lot and served us well. One cleaver system involved water tanks that were filled on the show grounds and emptied as the show ended.

You are going to need to learn a knot or two. You will need to use a Tautline Hitch. Learn it and it will come in handy for the rest of your life. Google up ‘Tent Knots’

We have seen a few horror stories regarding show tents. You can push around a big sailboat with a 100 square foot sail. The wind gets under the tent and up it goes. I forget where we were, but I’ll never forget an unanchored tent getting about 200 feet in the air before disappearing into a body of water a few hundred yards away, not before doing thousands of dollars damage to other booths.

We got to where we could set up our Archtop in about 20 minutes, but that won’t happen the first time you try with any but the easiest tents.

We have quit doing shows and sell our wirewrapped jewelry through galleries and online. Shows are great fun and we met a lot of nice people, but they are a bit of work.

Susie and Steve
(Please leave comments and your thoughts below)

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