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The deepest of Blue and hints of Sea green is like looking into a sparkling pool of magical water... The Blue Glass cabochon is hand coiled and netted in a lace center bezel of antique silver brass. The hand coiled wrap is accented with all things found in a mermaids collection... Blue freshwater pearls, blue zircon swarovski crystals and a very detailed antique silver sea star, and highly detailed Mermaid, creates the Deep Blue Sea Mermaid Pendant.
A wire work creation ...
photo by www.stefanocolonna.it
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P.S. Alkhymeia is my old name, Mirabilis Jewelry is my new name :)))
I knew this piece was going to have a dramatic theme but this morning as I photographed this, a single turtle dove landed within arms reach of me...and I knew what I had to name it.
"When Dove's Cry" Copper wire wrap collar necklace
Gray Tigers eye, Rhodochrosite and oxidized copper wire.
Polymer clay and wirework creation 100% handmade ...
Follow me on:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/MirabilsJewelry
Instagram: www.instagram.com/mirabilisjewelry/
Web Site: www.mirabilisjewelry.com
P.S. Alkhymeia is my old name, Mirabilis Jewelry is my new name :)))
A wire work creation ...
photo by www.stefanocolonna.it
Follow me on:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/MirabilsJewelry
Instagram: www.instagram.com/mirabilisjewelry/
Web Site: www.mirabilisjewelry.com
P.S. Alkhymeia is my old name, Mirabilis Jewelry is my new name :)))
Orecchini Asimmetrici, realizzati in rame argentato e paste sintetiche
Polymerclay and wirework creation
Follow me on:
Facebook: www.facebook.com/MirabilsJewelry
Instagram: www.instagram.com/mirabilisjewelry/
Web Site: www.mirabilisjewelry.com
P.S. Alkhymeia is my old name, Mirabilis Jewelry is my new name :)))
Volumio Music Streamer
Backplane for connecting Raspberry Pi 3 B+ to PiFi DAC. The pins are connected using wire wrapping method. It is also used to connect Raspberry Pi GPIO pins to other connectors.
Raspberry Pi 3 B+ with PiFi DAC+ 2.0 connected by headers wired on prototype PCB board. PiFi DAC+ is modified to reduce circuit level noise.
This necklace was inspired by the beautiful Elven character Arwen from the Lord of the Rings. Fine silver and sterling silver are intricately wrapped around a beautiful purple glass briolette.
"Medea and the Golden Fleece"
This collar is the second piece in a line of historically/ mythologically inspired jewelry.
Based on the myth of the Golden Fleece it is constructed by scrunching and "sewing" 22 gauge wire. The base is copper that has been hammered and coiled and the chain is forged out of 14 gauge copper wire. Lays around 17" long.
Here is the info on Medea, Jason and the Fleece thanks to Wikipedia.;-)
Medea's role began after Jason arrived from Iolcus to Colchis to claim his inheritance and throne by retrieving the Golden Fleece. In the most complete surviving account, the Argonautica of Apollonius, Medea fell in love with him and promised to help him, but only on the condition that if he succeeded, he would take her with him and marry her. Jason agreed. In a familiar mythic motif, Aeëtes promised to give him the fleece, but only if he could perform certain tasks. First, Jason had to plough a field with fire-breathing oxen that he had to yoke himself. Medea gave him an unguent with which to anoint himself and his weapons, to protect him from the bulls' fiery breath. Then, Jason had to sow the teeth of a dragon in the ploughed field (compare the myth of Cadmus). The teeth sprouted into an army of warriors. Jason was forewarned by Medea, however, and knew to throw a rock into the crowd. Unable to determine where the rock had come from, the soldiers attacked and defeated each other. Finally, Aeëtes made Jason fight and kill the sleepless dragon that guarded the fleece. Medea put the beast to sleep with her narcotic herbs. Jason then took the fleece and sailed away with Medea, as he had promised. Apollonius says that Medea only helped Jason in the first place because Hera had convinced Aphrodite or Eros to cause Medea to fall in love with him. Medea distracted her father as they fled by killing her brother Absyrtus. In some versions, Medea is said to have dismembered his body and scattered his parts on an island, knowing her father would stop to retrieve them for proper burial; in other versions, it is Absyrtus himself who pursued them, and was killed by Jason. During the fight, Atalanta was seriously wounded, but Medea healed her.
According to some versions, Medea and Jason stopped on her aunt Circe's island so that she could be cleansed after the murder of her brother, relieving her of blame for the deed.
Jason et Médée by Gustave Moreau (1865).
On the way back to Thessaly, Medea prophesied that Euphemus, the Argo's helmsman, would one day rule over all Libya. This came true through Battus, a descendant of Euphemus.
The Argo then reached the island of Crete, guarded by the bronze man, Talos (Talus). Talos had one vein which went from his neck to his ankle, bound shut by a single bronze nail. According to Apollodorus, Talos was slain either when Medea drove him mad with drugs, deceived him that she would make him immortal by removing the nail, or was killed by Poeas's arrow (Apollodorus 1.140). In the Argonautica, Medea hypnotized him from the Argo, driving him mad so that he dislodged the nail, ichor flowed from the wound, and he bled to death (Argonautica 4.1638). After Talos died, the Argo landed.
While Jason searched for the Golden Fleece, Hera, who was still angry at Pelias, conspired to make him fall in love with Medea, who she hoped would kill Pelias. When Jason and Medea returned to Iolcus, Pelias still refused to give up his throne. Medea conspired to have Pelias' own daughters kill him. She told them she could turn an old ram into a young ram by cutting up the old ram and boiling it (alternatively, she did this with Aeson, Jason's father). During the demonstration, a live, young ram jumped out of the pot. Excited, the girls cut their father into pieces and threw him into a pot. Having killed Pelias, Jason and Medea fled to Corinth.