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Fire agates!!! When I
saw my first real fire agate, my first
reaction was, “that looks like chewed up
bubble gum.” But, as you look into these
stones a little closer, they have a definite
appeal with tiny bubble shapes with
glistening color shifts from red to green.
Most of these agates
pose a challenge for the designer as they
tend to have a bumpy irregular shape. But,
when you carve one of these, you will know
why the lapidary had to carve it into such
an odd shape. To maximize the most of the
fire (play in color) and to give the bubbles
shapes the best optical effects you end up
chasing microscopic layers, following their
bubbly shapes. This leaves you with an odd
shaped cab.
I buggered up my
first three cabs. The target layers are
microscopic, and you want to shoot for the
green and red layers to maximize those
colors. So, you can’t just plow through it
with a heavy-duty grit, because you will
loose the layers completely when you remove
more material with the polish. You have to
gently remove tiny layers with a very fine
diamond paste, preferably using a wooden bur
on a flexshaft. So that when you reach the
layer, you just have to hit it with some
cerium oxide, and you’re finished. And,
unless you are a very experienced carver of
these agates, you have to guess at where you
will find these target layers. I just kept
cleaning it off and looking closely. It is
definitely tedious work.
With this agate, I
tried my best to keep it fairly round. I
knew approximately what I was going to do
with it when finished. Here, I have cabbed
this ocean jasper into a teardrop shape. I
them bored a hole and tapered the hole to
set the agate into it. Then I epoxied the
agate in place from the back. The metalwork
is riveted in place to frame the agate. I
kept the framework fairly simple. The
stones were the focus of my attention on
this one.
I liked the play on
the names of the stones, ocean and fire.
The jasper also has this textural look and
colors of an aerial photo of the Earth.
According to many ancient folklores, fire
was originally dropped to the Earth for mans
discovery. The indigenous people of the
Puget Sound area told of a raven that was
tricked into dropping the fire, and
Prometheus was in the midst of tricking
Zeus, when he dropped fire. I love these
similarities in lore throughout the world.
It is these similarities and love of story
that helps bind us as human beings.
In the picture
above, the pendant is pictured by itself;
however my girlfriend and bead goddess is
going to string this one up with some bronze
freshwater pearls. This should add even
more to this symbolic dichotomy between
water and fire.
Thanks for looking.
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