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Wednesday
29Oct2008

Spontaneous Design

Whenever I have a new design pictured in my mind or when I want to work out the perfect ring sizes for a particular weave, I like to sit down with every single ring size we make in a particular gauge (or two) so that I can go up or down in size by tiny increments in order to get the perfect fit. You're very familiar with this method of design if you own our Earring Designer RingSet. We've received a lot of very happy letters from people who use it and are experiencing a deep sense of creative fulfillment from working this way.

When we began making and testing our new specialty rings, I inadvertently discovered a completely different but complimentary and very liberating method of designing one of a kind pieces of jewelry that I'd like to share with you here.

At that time, when Gary was testing and working up new processes, he was making small amounts of many different ring sizes, inspecting them, then keeping the rings separated by metal and shape but mixing all the ring sizes together in each bin. I was fascinated with them and kept taking scoops of rings from the bins to do my own experiments. This bracelet was the experiment that resulted in an epiphany about spontaneous design.

Normally when I design, I have an image in my mind of what I want to make and I'm choosing the best rings to manifest that vision. With spontaneous design, I don't know what I want to make and am, instead, arranging and rearranging what I have (rings of all shapes and sizes) until they make something I love. It's a fun a low pressure way to work, particularly wonderful on those days when you feel fussy because you want to make something but you don't know what you want to make. It's also a fascinating way to become familiar with some of the unanticipated properties of each ring shape.

I love those mixes so much that we put together assortment packs, mixes of all different sizes in a single shape and a single metal, sold by weight. The trick to making the most of the assortments is in choosing the amount that best suits your plans. If you want to make earrings, you're only likely to need size matched rings in pairs... meaning you only need two of a given size to be able to use them for earrings. The quarter, half or single troy ounce units will be useful for that purpose, you should always find at least two of the same size ring, even in the smallest assortments.

If you're planning bracelets or necklaces and expect to need greater numbers of size matched rings, it's best to begin with a larger quantity of mix. If you'd like to use your rings 5 to 7 of the same size at a time, start with at least 3 troy ounces of mix, more if you can. The 5ozt 6 Pack is the ultimate spontaneous design setup. It's inspiring, luxurious, probably even decadent, but it is so much fun.

I've added some speedy buttons to make it easy to order your choice of mixes but a little explanation is in order. A 1ozt 6 Pack is 1 troy ounce each of the 6 different shapes in your choice of metal. A 2ozt 6 Pack is 2 troy ounces each of the 6 different ring shapes in your choice of metal, and so on.


Speedy Add to Cart Buttons for
Specialty Ring 6 Pack Assortments


 Sterling  Copper  Argentium 
 ¼ozt 6 Pack  ¼ozt 6 Pack  ¼ozt 6 Pack 
 ½ozt 6 Pack  ½ozt 6 Pack  ½ozt 6 Pack 
 1ozt 6 Pack  1ozt 6 Pack  1ozt 6 Pack 
 2ozt 6 Pack  2ozt 6 Pack  2ozt 6 Pack 
 3ozt 6 Pack  3ozt 6 Pack  3ozt 6 Pack 
 4ozt 6 Pack  4ozt 6 Pack  4ozt 6 Pack 
 5ozt 6 Pack  5ozt 6 Pack  5ozt 6 Pack 

If you'd prefer to order specialty rings one type at a time, just click the name of the shape you want in the metal you want and you'll be taken directly to that assortment.


Sterling
Round

Copper
Round

Argentium
Round

Sterling
Square

Copper
Square

Argentium
Square

Sterling
Diamond

Copper
Diamond

Argentium
Diamond

Sterling
Twisted

Copper
Twisted

Argentium
Twisted

Sterling
Half Round

Copper
Half Round

Argentium
Half Round

Sterling
MultiStrand



Copper
MultiStrand



Argentium
MultiStrand


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