Posts Tagged ‘Petoskey Stone’

Picture Frame Pendant

Sunday, April 11th, 2010

p4080175I have come to the realization that I have not talked about any of my new designs in quite a while. My latest picture frame pendant has become my recent favorite, and I think these will become a popular items this year.

My interest has not always been in jewelry making and the lapidary arts. I started out in visual arts, especially water color. When you paint a picture, it always looks better in a nicely matching frame, so I thought why not stones? This got me thinking of all my wife’s beads and especially beads made from Michigan rocks and minerals.  Between the rocky Great Lakes shorelines, stony gifts from the glaciers, and mineral finds in the Upper Peninsula, Michigan has a real variety of stone to choose from.  Many of our Michigan stones are miracles, found here and really nowhere else on earth.  What if I could frame these beads in a collage featuring a variety of the most popular of these Michigan stones, making a picture of Michigan Miracles, or Lake Superior Miracles?

I started playing around last year with sizes and designs for my window boxes and this winter decided that the most pleasing shape and size may be a rectangular box of around 20X30mm. Stones can be arranged in pleasing and artistic ways within these confines. Thicknesses of the frames can also be manipulated to protect the beads therein. I have made a couple of much larger frames also that some people enjoy. Larger, or more stones can be used in these larger frames.

The featured stone in a Michigan pendant could be expected to be our Michigan greenstone (chlorastrolite) which is found in small areas of the Keweenaw Peninsula or on Isle Royale.  We had some very nice Isle Royale Greenstone beads that were drilled incorrectly. These beads were drilled so when they are strung, you can only see the sides of the beads and not the widest and best part of the greenstone. By using a prong-set on these beads I was able to turn the best faces to the front of the pendants, giving folks a very large size greenstone for a reasonable price.  The cost of these gemstones alone is worth our low pendant price.p4080180

I think it is important that the best possible beads be used. If I’m going to make a little piece of art, I want to use the best media (stones), that are available.  I am selecting from a nice variety of Michigan miracles: greenstone, Petoskey stone, datolite, jasperlite, thomsonite, firebrick, kona dolomite, epidote, favosite, hematite, prehnite, copper/silver half breeds, and Lake Superior agate.

Wire wrappers should be warned that these pendants take me three times the time that I commonly spend on a pendant! I also think that it helps to have some training in balance, layout, and color and an artistic eye to make these little treasures.

We have posted a couple of these little Miracle treasures on out website, and hope you will experience the same enjoyment wearing and showing these pendants as I do making them.

The Beach Hunt

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

I finally got out to search for Petoskey Stones on the beach. I will confess that this particular hunt site is in the Charlevoix area, but I am sworn to secrecy on the exact location.p4190018

This was the first weekend that the snow had cleared enough in the woods to get to this area. It is very remote and requires a 4WD to get to it. I went with my best rock-hunting buddy Gary. We had great expectations of finding a good quantity of Petoskey stones as well as high quality Favosites, and were not disappointed.

It actually sprinkled continuously while we were hunting, which made the stones on the beach stand out. The water was smooth so we could also see the rocks in the water. Within a month of ice leaving the area rocks become covered in slime and moss, making it almost unhuntable (my spell check says this is not a word, but I like it anyway), so early spring is the only time to have good hunting in this area. This is a prime example of knowing when to hunt certain areas and when not to. I’m sure, for example, out west you would hunt hard in the cooler weather and not hunt the desert in the summer.

Normally we park our truck at the end of the hunting area and hike the beach back the way we came in. We take a couple empty buckets and dump any buckets we fill next to the trail we came in on, then pick up full buckets as we leave.

p4190021

Indeed it was a great hunt as anticipated. Gary and I each filled a five-gallon bucket with high quality stones. This took a couple hours. Next time we’ll take our insulated waders so we can check further out in the water for the “big” ones.

As an aside, it is April 22nd as I write this and we had snow again last night. When will the winter end?

First Petoskey Stone Hunt of 2009

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Living in northern Michigan is sometimes harsh, as it has been this winter. We have officially had snowfall for 7 months in a row. This is April 18th and there are still some snow piles scattered about.

On April 3rd Bonnie and I made a trek out for the first Petoskey Stone hunt of the year, to one of the private gravel pits we hunt . We did not expect much as it was dry, but we were honestly stir-crazy and wanted to get out.  Normally we hunt Petoskey stones in the rain because they show up better.

I checked one of the streams from the melting snow and discovered a few small stones in the clear cold water. Good thing for the gem scoop as I would not have relished putting my hand in that cold water to retrieve a rock. Bonnie picked up a few right out on the flat ground of the pit. This time of year the stones are clean and stick out well on the washed sand.

It did sprinkle a little, which helped find more stones on some of the gravel piles. I checked the rock falls (These are stones which eroded out over the winter and fell to the bottom of the steep gravel banks), always a good place to look. I found a good quantity of nice stones in these falls including two high-quality pink Petoskey Stones.  We also found a nice Puddingstone, which is not native to our area, but was brought here by glaciers from Sudbury, Ontario which is 150 miles away.p4190023

We are awaiting a good rain so we can go out and find greater numbers of stones.

My best find of the day was a softball sized and flawlessly-patterned beauty. I’ll probably polish that one and sell it with a tripod stand. We ended the day with about 35 pounds of really nice stones, an excellent first hunt.

I’m happy the winter is over and a beach hunt is scheduled for next week. I’ll keep you informed.


Website Design Copyright © 2008 Boldt Design, All Rights Reserved
Snob Appeal Jewelry is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).