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©2019 Barry Smith - Two leaves made from silver-plated brass placemat with a strong design stamped on it; and with stems that have to seam at the back |
I have a commission which requires me to make leaves that can stand upright in a seed shaped aperture in a piece of timber. The leaf needs to be able to have its own stem which can be glued into a hole in the bottom of the aperture. I set about experimenting with metal and how I would incorporate a stem into the design. The metal and stem of choice are incorporated into the leaves above.
Following are a few photos of the process.
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©2019 Barry Smith - An adjustment to my usual leaf forms - stems sections added to the leaf. |
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©2019 Barry Smith - Hammered and ready for opening |
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©2019 Barry Smith - In the rough - stem section opened with the leaf |
Stems with metal curved to the front which required brass rod to be included; and stems with the metal curved to the back which do not require brass rods.
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©2019 Barry Smith - Two silver-plated brass leaf forms with the stem seam at the back; one copper leaf with join at the front and brass rod; and one silver-plated brass leaf with seam at the front and brass rod insert. |
Final five leaf forms with three different metal and two different stem designs.
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©2019 Barry Smith - The experiment enable a choice to be made about metal quality and stem design. The bottom leaf form is the look I'm going for. |
Now all I need to do is make about 12 leaves so I can choose the best 9.
love the little twist on thew drip tip of the leaves and the stem settings are perfect
ReplyDeletethe stems do add a new level of interest ... and as always, you make the process look much easier than it likely is in reality
ReplyDelete