
Ocean's Treasure Steampunk pendant-$55
Handmade out of watch parts and a vintage hammered brass piece. The stone is a large genuine Swarovski crystal held in place by a strong epoxy. It is one-of-a-kind and due to the nature of the parts I cannot replicate it.
One of my latest steampunk pieces, it debuted at AC2010 along with a few others in the art show. Took me a little while to have the time to take some nice pics. I really love this piece. Under the crystal is a gear, so when viewed from the side it has teeth.
The watch backing used has been tooled to give it an interesting pattern. The pendant is approximately 1.5 inches across.
Price is $55, shipped in the US is $5, shipped overseas will require a quote. I am uncomfortable shipping outside the US without insurance. I have more pics, just ask!
One of my latest steampunk pieces, it debuted at AC2010 along with a few others in the art show. Took me a little while to have the time to take some nice pics. I really love this piece. Under the crystal is a gear, so when viewed from the side it has teeth.
The watch backing used has been tooled to give it an interesting pattern. The pendant is approximately 1.5 inches across.
Price is $55, shipped in the US is $5, shipped overseas will require a quote. I am uncomfortable shipping outside the US without insurance. I have more pics, just ask!
Category All / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Unspecified / Any
Size 697 x 700px
File Size 246.9 kB
great work. :) one almost expects it to move something... ^^
how did you manage the crystal not changing the colour and shininess when glueing it to the metal plate with epoxy? usually it would look vastly different due to the glue breaking the crystals' surface reflection index (does this make sense?). typical strass stones are backed with silver paint to avoid that.
how did you manage the crystal not changing the colour and shininess when glueing it to the metal plate with epoxy? usually it would look vastly different due to the glue breaking the crystals' surface reflection index (does this make sense?). typical strass stones are backed with silver paint to avoid that.
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