I’m trying to forever preserve some of my clover from my four and five leaf clover patch in the yard. I selected one five-leaf clover and four four-leaf clovers and pressed them between layers of wax paper for a couple weeks. I purchased round bevels with loops and put an initial layer of clear two-part epoxy resin down inside.
Photo description: 5 gold plated bevel cups half filled with 2 part expoxy
When the epoxy set, I used Modge Podge to attach the pressed clover to the epoxy, then put another sealing coat on top of the leaves.
Photo description: five-leaf clover decoupaged to an epoxy base in a gold plated bevel cup
Once the glue had dried, I put a final layer of epoxy on top.
Photo description: real pressed clover preserved in epoxy resin in gold plated bevel cups
I chose gold plated bevels because I think four-leaf clovers should be on gold, but also because epoxy resin tends to have a yellow tint. That yellow blends in with the gold, mitigating the problem.
My quartet uses Tombo Pitch Pipes. I’ve see fully customized pipes with different colors and logos! I dipped my toes in the waters of customization and applied a custom paper to the decal in the center of the pipe.
Photo description: four Tombo Pitch Pipes with custom labels decoupaged in place
The Tombo label is 42mm in diameter and has a small indent to line up on the pipe so the pitches are in the right place. I used Adobe Illustrator to layout the design, then my laser cutter to cut them out precisely. To apply, I painted the bottom and top with matte Modge Podge.
I did mark three of beginning pitches with the initials of the song names, just in case. I should be able to remove these labels and put on new ones for future revisions.
Eventually I would like to make them fully customized, and not brown, but that is a future endeavor.
It is traditional for Sweet Adelines to give small gifts of encouragement or luck in the time leading up to contest. Last year I crocheted worry worms, this year I made small four leaf clover charms from dyed green leather.
Photo description: suede side of a 1 inch charm cut from green leather, sitting on my hand
I designed the cut out in Adobe Illustrator. The grouping of four hearts represents the four voices of Barbershop Harmony. I originally wanted to do a fill engrave, then a cut out, but overall processing time would be 1.3 minutes each. I needed 60 charms. I redesigned the charm to be cuts only, using open slits to delineate the heart-shaped leaves, which dropped the processing time to 18 seconds each. The slits can also be used to hang the charm on a keyring or similar. I’m quite pleased with the number of pieces I was able to cut from a 12” square of leather.
Photo description: view through the yellow window of the WeCreat blue diode laser cutter to show the tight formation of clover shapes
I did lose three cuts on the left because the leather wasn’t completely flat, but all the other charms came out well. The laser does leave a charred edge, so I washed all the charms with water to remove the soot, then let them dry overnight.
I designed, printed, and cut flat cards and used glue dots to mount the leather charms to the cards.
Photo description: 60 Good Luck cards with leather charms that have my quartet logo “Precious Tones” with the words “A small good luck charm for a big moment. Go Shine!”
I have obtained my most expensive fiber to date. Camaj Fiber Arts had a sale on Guanaco fiber, which is harvested from wild animals in South America. Because they are not domesticated animals, the fiber is harder to obtain, hence the cost.
Photo description: 1/2 ounce of Guanaco combed top fiber with an information sheet provided by Camaj Fiber Arts
I will not be blending this fiber, but spinning it pure and making swatches for my fiber books.
And yes, vicuña is on my wish list, along with qiviut.