Idle Talons

Baby's First Locket

fun, musings, processLarkin HamiltonComment

At some point I may need to stop calling Larkin-- who turned 19 over the holidays!-- baby πŸ˜…

There was a ton of learning involved in making this piece. Larkin still gets nervous drilling holes through stone to attach elements with rivets because there is always a chance the stone they painstakingly chose for a particular project will break during the drilling process. This time, Larkin drilled the holes after the cab was completely polished. They got lucky! Next time, they will drill holes *before* completing stonework on the cabochon.

The hinge and clasp are also new elements for Larkin. The hinge is a hollow tube that the wire on the ivy vine passes through, complete with notches cut into the metal back that the wires fit into when it closes for a complete seal.

Larkin designed the tension spring clasp (I made up that term, anyone know what it’s actually called?!) that closes securely with a very satisfying quiet "snick."

Larkin fabricated the back of the locket by shaping sheet metal into a dome that almost perfectly mirrors the arch of the stone cabochon, then adding a bezel for a bit more depth to accommodate treasures. The seal is secure enough that a piece of paper will easily stay put in the locket, but there is enough space for other more three dimensional trinkets like tiny stones or a small lock of hair. Larkin filled it with faceted garnets and happily carried it around the house shaking it like a tiny, precious baby rattle. 🀣

Which brings us to the stone front! The applegate jade stone was found by our family and is not a true jade, but a serpentine more closely related to bowenite. Larkin cut this door from a particularly gemmy specimen-- when backlit, the whole piece glows a glorious yellow-green. In natural light, the stone is a mottled deep green, almost black color. The black and silvery inclusions are magnetite-- how cool is a translucent green stone that attracts a magnet?!

This piece is entirely made from stone, sterling silver, and silver solder-- no glues to break down and come unstuck over time. Larkin is not ready for this sweet little piece to leave their goblin grasp quite yet-- but they do plan on making another. ;)