Original Price: $53.00

Special Rate: $37.10

Chanel Tweed Ring and Bracelet with Sylvie Peraud

Sylvie Peraud has found a new way to create the wonderful texture of tweed. Her technique is novel and will add a new dimension to polymer clay work. Students will use this technique to create both a ring and a bracelet in this CraftArtEdu class.

Original Price: $53.00

Special Rate: $37.10

Oyumaru classes
Intermediate
46:09
   
46:09

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... materials

Class Materials List

• Pasta machine
• Craft knife and a rigid blade
• Roller
• Stylus ball tool
• An old toothbrush
• Baby wipes
• Burnt umber oil paint
• Plasterer's grid
• Liquid clay
• Heat gun
• CA glue
• Mini drill with 1 and 2 mm drill bits

For the molds:
• 6 inches square piece of fabric
• Tape and tweezers
• Textile strengthener or textile glue
• 4 sticks of "oyumaru"
• A piece of wood with an interesting texture
• Clay in 2oz. packages: 1/4th white clay 1/16th brown and a pinch of black

For the ring:
• Ring template
• Ring finding
• 3/8" round Kemper cutter
• A little brass tube
• 1 inch of brown or black 1 mm buna cord
• Clay in 2 oz. packages:  1/2 red and yellow; 1/8th white and a pinch of black
• 1/8th translucent to be baked 10 minutes.

For the bracelet:
• A template for the bracelet shape (Sculpey Shapelets )
• 2 and 3/4 " round cookie cutter
• Flat nose pliers
• 2 or 3 2 mm diameter "O" rings
• 10" of black 2 mm diameter buna cord
• 5" of black 1 mm diameter buna cord
• Clay in 2 oz. packages: 1/2 white; 1/8th brown; 1/2 black and the equivalent of 1/16th of three colors (I used: green, light and dark brown)
• 1/8th translucent to be baked 10 minutes.



... instructors

Sylvie Peraud

Making jewelry has been part of Sylvie’s hobbies since childhood. Beads when she was young, melted recycled plastics later and polymer clay since 2005. Inspiration is everywhere around her, when walking in the nature, when discovering other art mediums, when reading a book. What she loves best is making faux: faux wood and faux stones. The closer she gets to the real material, the happier she is. Working with a medium as versatile as polymer clay makes it endless.

When working with polymer clay, there are no limits other than those you fix to yourself. It has led Sylvie to create a simple...
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After taking a class, are you then allowed to use the technique to produce pieces to sell, as long as you reference that it was a technique learned from whoever taught the class? 

"Yes, students can produce work to sell - teachers know that they are putting techniques out there for their students to use. The hope is that the student will apply techniques to create their own unique spin on them, but we cannot take money from students and then say "you can't do that."  We do ask that they give credit to the originator." - Donna Kato

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