Wednesday, January 26, 2011

My New Addiction!

I must admit, I have an addiction. I have friends who've had this addiction for a while. I understood their addiction but didn't feel the draw to it myself until just recently. My new addiction? Well...


And...


To feed my addiction, I need more, more, more!

My new "dealer" is having a contest. If you go to Beadsaddict Facebook page and click "like" on my pictures, I might just win some more! Please, won't you help out a jeweler with a serious addiction? Please?

Monday, January 24, 2011

Marketplace Monday by Finding Fabulous

Finding Fabulous is hosting Marketplace Monday. There are lots of great Valentine's Day gifts featured! Check it out!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant


Well, it's the dead of winter. There are no craft shows to speak of. It's not a great time of year to get jewelry sales. Let's have a contest!


I'm giving away this gorgeous pink druzy heart pendant! I first designed this shape for my friend, Winnie, who wanted me to make a ring for her out of a druzy. My excitement over druzies has evidentally rubbed off on her. She picked a gorgeous blue druzy out of my stash of druzies that I purchased from beadsaddict, one of my fellow Etsy sellers; she has some GORGEOUS stones! Anyway, Winnie picked out a stone, and had me design a ring just for her. We were both very happy with the way it turned out. It looks gorgeous on her hand, too!

With Valentine's Day coming up, I wanted to do something special for my Facebook Fans. I do LOVE my Facebook fans! Therefore, I designed a pendant that I'm going to give away. It's made up of a gorgeous pink and white druzy, bezel set and embellished to form a heart. It's my Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant. It's going to be given away to one of my Facebook Fans. It could be you!

Here's how it works:


2. Suggest my page to your friends. You can hit the "share" button under any posts I do on my page, or there's also a "share" button at the bottom on the left of my Facebook fan page. There used to be a "suggest to friends" button, but evidently Facebook has done away with that, so you're going to have to use your imagination. Sorry!

3. On Sunday, February 6th, see how many of your friends also "like" my page. That will also be on the left side under the profile picture, but above the total number of people who "like" my page.

4. E-mail me at lisa@sandytoesjewelry.com to tell me how many of your friends "like" my page. I need proof, though. To prove how many, please go to my page, highlight the "6 of so-and-so-many friends like this", showing the 6 friends it will show you, copy it, and paste that in your e-mail to me. I need to receive this by Sunday, February 6th, midnight (EST), though! Make sure you put "Win Me! Winnie's Heart Pendant Contest" in the Subject line.

5. Whomever has the most friends that "like" my page will win the pendant! I will determine the winner on Monday, February 7th and get it shipped off so that the winner will receive it before Valentine's Day.

I will warn you, however. One of my friends has been promoting my fan page for a really long time, so she probably already has lots of friends that "like" my page. She's going to be stiff competition! (Thanks, Michelle!)


Good luck!

Friday, January 7, 2011

O, Christmas Tree!

A few weeks ago, my boss decided to have a contest and asked all of us to write, in fifty words or less, what Christmas meant to us. Well, I went over, of course, because I can't abbreviate ANYTHING. But it did get me thinking. What DID Christmas mean to me?

She asked this a day or two before we bought our Christmas tree. I love a live tree, so that's what we get every year. It's messy, it drops needles, as well as ornaments, as it slowly wilts. But there's nothing like the smell of it, or each tree's uniqueness.

As I started decorating I think about our life. Our Christmas tree tells the story of our lives. Decorating the tree reminds me of EVERYTHING we've gone through. There are the ornaments on the tree that I made for my parents in preschool. There are ornaments that my kids made for me and my husband in preschool. There are the ornaments that my husband and I bought our first year of marriage at the dollar store, when we were terribly poor. There's the ornament that my grandmother made for our family when I was little and it makes me miss her. There are the photo ornaments of my children as babies with their toothless grins, and I have to smile.

Now, when we go on vacation, one of the souvenirs that I try to always bring back with us is a Christmas ornament. That helps us keep the memories of that trip alive. We have countless ornaments from Disney World. There's a crawdad with a crown and mardi gras beads from New Orleans as a reminder of the one and only trip my husband and I took by ourselves after we had kids. This year we took a cruise to Mexico, and I didn't find any ornaments while on the trip, but while I was Christmas shopping I did buy us a burro pinata ornament to remind us of the trip.

There are also the ornaments that just remind us of everyday life. The black lab ornament for Molly, the chocolate lab ornament for Hershey, the cat for both cats. We have a Santa constuction company ornament with Santa in a hard hat on a steel beam for the house we built in the Outer Banks. The fish ornament my best friend in the Outer Banks gave me. Almost all of our ornaments mean something to us.

I really don't understand how people can just decorate their tree to look pretty. Our Christmas tree is our time to reflect. It reminds us of where we've been. I'm hoping to pass down the tradition to my boys. I've already started to separate some ornaments out for them to use on their own trees, though we have a few years before they'll have their own trees. But my wish for them is that at least once a year, they remember their lives when they were children, and how much we love them. And that they pass it on to their children.


Now it's time to take the Christmas tree down. That will stir up all those wonderful memories again. I guess that makes it twice a year that it stirs up memories! That's what Christmas is all about. Happy remembering!

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Where the Wild Ficus Grows


I love my workshop! Sometimes, I think I love it a little too much. I have the great outdoors on three sides of me, with big, double glass doors on all four sides of the room, so that I have a clear view in every direction. Of course, one of those doors just looks out onto my living room, but even that has it's advantages. I can keep an eye on my kids.

I didn't always have a workshop that I love. My first workshop, in our first house, only consisted of my bench shoved into a tiny corner of our laundry room. I couldn't even push my chair all the way back because I'd run into the washer. It was tight.

In my second house, size wasn't the problem with my workshop. It was pretty darn big. But I was still in the laundry room. And the laundry room was in the basement. An unheated basement.

My workshop now is everything I could ever want. It's big. It's sunny. I have great views. It's in the main part of the house. I have my own television. But most of all, everything fits! Even my huge ficus! Too bad he blocks some of the sun, though. This is usually where I take my photos of my jewelry.



The table in my workshop is where I store my laptop and where I can price and tag my jewelry.

My bench has been with me since I graduated from college. My dad made it for me. It has tons of drawers to store all my goodies. The drawer pulls don't match, but my bench rocks, none-the-less.


In my drawers, I store small polishing supplies, my metals, my saw, caliper, and sanding sticks, my mandrels, hammers, draw plate, draw tongs, and stamps. The other drawers are just for storing all those items that don't fit anywhere else.

I love the little shelf my dad added to the inside of my bench. I store my notebooks, findings, and wax carving supplies there. And the catch tray is big enough to catch all of my shavings and stones that like to go flying.


On the other side of the room, I have all of my big tools. This includes my kiln, ultrasonic, home-made polishing hood and motor, and down below is my vacuum caster. The cabinets were recycled from when my parents redid their kitchen, and we just bought a counter top to put on the top. They're not actually built in, so if we ever move, I can take them with me.
This crazy piece of equipment to the left is a wax injector. I have yet to use it, but can't wait until I get to the point where I can. I hope it works; I got it used.



These cabinets are WONDERFUL! They all have pull out drawers, which are great for storing all those little items that might get lost deep in the back of the cabinets if I didn't have them. Here, you can see my casting supplies, such as my flasks, mixing container, and the investment, as well as other odds and ends. Another drawer holds my dapping block, punches, circle cutter, and my scale. Then I have a great storage space for all the items that I don't use very often.
I love my workshop! It's my own private space that I don't have to share with anyone. Even the television is all mine! I had no idea how important that was until I had kids.
This post was inspired by one of the Etsy Teams that I'm a member of, Aspiring Metalsmiths.
There are quite a few of us who cleaned up our work areas (a little) to show them off to those of you who are interested in seeing where we work. I hope you'll go and take a look at their workspaces, too. And here they are:
Jessica Lopour of Abella Blue
Jeanne Milmann of Golden Water Creations
Sylvia Anderson of Sylvia Anderson
Steph Stargell of Steph Stargell Designs
Brandy of The Frogs Pond
Esmeralda of SilverBlueberry
Joy of JoyPeckJoy
Carole Axium of Carole Axium Designs
Gloria of Hemlock Hollow
Stacy of Form and Funktion
Julie A. Mauerer of Jamauerer

Saturday, June 19, 2010

The Wind in Your... Tent


I wish I could say that I love the wind, but I've got to say it. I really don't!

I haven't always hated the wind. I think I earned my hate for it when I lived in the Outer Banks. The wind DOES NOT stop blowing there. It's relentless, and does lots of damage. I remember pulling out the ladder in 30 mile per hour winds to fix the siding on the house. Once one piece of siding is loose, the whole side can come off if you don't get it nailed back down quickly. It also used to make the water in the toilets slosh during a bad storm. I've told people this story, but I'm not sure they believe me. Also, the same weekend that we installed our new storm door on our front door, the wind ripped it out of my hands and slammed it against the porch railing, putting a huge ding in it. It didn't even last a day!

When we moved away from the Outer Banks, people would ask us what the heck was wrong with us. We were in paradise and we moved? Yes, we did! Sorry, guys, there is no paradise! It's lovely, yes, but the wind will wear you out!

My fellow arts and craft show participants know exactly what I'm talking about. There is nothing worse than sitting under a ten foot square tent, with about an eight foot roof, with the wind shaking your entire display. Well, except maybe for rain to go with it, but we won't go there right now. I have been at craft shows in the Outer Banks where I have total strangers holding down the three other legs on my tent. Luckily, they tend to not mind. People do like to be needed, even if it's only for their weight!



I'm going to give those of you who do outdoor shows a few tips on how to deal with wind. DON'T EVER assume you don't need to weigh down your booth! Gusts can come out of nowhere. Did I tell you that we had to pluck our 16 foot trampoline out of a 50 foot pine once? That was in the Outer Banks, of course. We didn't think we needed to anchor that, either. Have you ever felt how heavy a trampoline is? Anyway, if you're on grass/dirt, I highly suggest you put anchors in each corner. Put them all the way in. The tent can lift the couple of inches that you didn't nail them in, and that can give it enough momentum to lift it up further.

Then I would suggest weight bags. They can be the ones that come with your tent or homemade ones, made from concrete, eye bolts and buckets. Suspend them from the roof corners. You don't need to have them hanging, but the line going to each corner of the roof should be tight, so the wind can't lift it at all.

The last thing that I do is I get those screw-in dog tie downs. Do you know what I mean? They look like a giant cork screw and you screw them into the ground to tie your dog out on a chain, though they don't care for that. Anyway, I'd recommend putting a couple of these outside your tent with a rope going to the top corner of your tent. This, of course, should be somewhere where nobody will trip on it. You don't want to get sued! Usually, I can only do this on the back, when there's nobody directly behind me.

Doing all three of these things have made my craft show in the Outer Banks much more relaxing. But, quite frankly, it's usually not quite enough.

Having the sides off during a hot craft show is a wonderful thing, because the breeze relieves SOME of the heat. Unfortunately, though, it tends to clear my tables, too. Usually, I have to put my sides up. I've tried a bunch of different things to try to get some air circulating through my tent. One good trick is to put a side up, but leave the bottom half open. This keeps my tables from clearing, but still allows a breeze through. But, if the wind is going all out, sometimes having the sides up seems to make my tent more vulnerable to being blown away. When this is the case, I drop the sides, but vent the corners. I have velcro closers on my sides, so I release just the first velcro closer on the top of my tent, on each side, and that seems to be enough of a vent to keep the tent from shaking violently. Plus, my tables don't get cleared. I'm still sweltering, but hey, I can't help you with everything!

I hope my tips on dealing with the wind help those of you who do craft shows. It took me a few years to discover these tips, and I'm hoping to save you some of the trial and error, and stress, that I struggled through. Doing craft shows can be fun! Happy crafting!

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Bubbles- An Etsy Treasury East

Etsy has designed a new way to do Treasuries, and they call it Treasury East. They say they'll never expire, which is WONDERFUL!!! Thank you so much for including me in your treasuries!

And now, for your viewing pleasure, Bubbles by VeronicaRStudio!

And this one, Selections from the Aspiring Metalsmiths Team by PrairieMoonJewelry.

I hope you'll click on some of the wonderful, hand-crafted items!