Kansas City Polymer Clay Guild

Kansas City: The Kansas City Polymer Clay Guild meets on the second Tuesday of each month, with quarterly "Clay Play Days" on Saturday afternoons. We learn, experiment and play with various techniques and new products and have a great time doing so!

Check out our website or our Facebook group.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Making a Bird Cane

Thanks to Deb for a great lesson on the bird cane. Most excellent job!! Here is the goldfinch cane she brought to share. Deb's finished cane was about 2" wide and 3 1/2" tall, the whole cane being 2" deep. She provided each member with step by step instructions, a color photo of a finch, plus a drawing on a clear plastic sheet to use as a guide when building the cane from slabs of color.


Here is the same cane, following partial reduction by Kim Keane. Kim used a Barbara McGuire technique, slapping the block onto a cement surface (equally on each face, repeating until the clay moves)


 Watch a video of the reducing process here.

Container Challenge Results - May 2010

May 2010's Saturday Play Day meeting was the deadline for the Kansas City Polymer Clay Guild's "Container" challenge. Creative containers could be vessels for a wide range of items - from tiny treasures to adult beverages. For more of these photos, check this link to an online photo album.

Patti Welch's inro box is about 4" tall when closed. She also wore great lavendar & stamped metal earrings that exactly matched her outfit.


Linda Lee Stewart's box with polymer lid.



Carol Hooper opted to decorate wine glasses with roses and vines.
Anne Rowe created a hanging closet sachet holder, making a round, hinged box with eyelet-lined scent holes. She used the lid of a garage-sale candle container as the baking form. Watch for her demo on this technique at our October meeting, Tuesday, October 12 at 6:30 p.m.


Deb Williams fabricated a tiny Egyption sarcophagus complete with mini mummies inside.

Beverly Potty crafted clay candle holders, festooned with Swarovski crystals, using cola cans as molds.

MariEtta Adams covered a small matchbox, then transformed it into a Asian-style pendant with matching earrings, using Barbara McGuire image transfers.

Donna Hess sent in her covered vase container, using some great sliced leaf canes and rolled snakes to adorn the green-covered tall vase.

Kim Keane covered a round tin with gold clay using a dark acrylic antiquing to highlight the deep texture of the clay. Note her use of her initial cane which she uses to identify all her pieces.


Michele Wineland created a  Pillow Puff Potion Pot, using foils and a technique we want her to share with us in a demo - using air to hold the clay in a puffy shape while baking!


Robin Young celebrates the 50th anniversary of the universal Peace symbol with her guitar purse! A guitar shaped tin is covered with canes, hinged and closure of leather and lined with spiral fabric that matches the spiral canes! The large PEACE sign attaches to the snap closure.

Great job, ladies! What a variety of sizes, shapes, techniques and ideas. Thanks for sharing. For more of these photos, check this link to an online photo album.

The rest of the afternoon was spent with Deb Williams' bird cane demo.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Published!

Congratulations to Sue Ellen Flescher! One of her Judaica pieces was selected to be included in an upcoming Lark Books publication. More info in the fall.

Making a Bird Cane

This is one of our quarterly SATURDAY Clay Play Day meetings - May 8 from Noon - 4pm

CHALLENGE ITEM DUE:
Theme: CONTAINER  (Can you think outside the box? Lidless? Sideways? Cover a vase or box? Make a drape bowl on a form? Pinch a pot?)

Deb Williams will be showing us how she makes her incredible birds. This is her Pileated Woodpecker. Below are the colors needed for a goldfinch, which is what we'll be doing on Saturday.

SUPPLY LIST for a goldfinch cane:

Clay: Use a firmer clay, like Premo, Kato, or Fimo Classic:

* 2 blocks zinc yellow (or cadmium yellow)
* 1 block black
* 1 block white
* 1/2 block orange
* 1 block raw sienna for the branch
* Clay for the background:  I mixed colors to come up with a "fern" green for my cane, but Fimo classic has something similar.  You can think about this later if you want.


Tools:

* Pasta machine
* Flexible blade
* Ripple blade (or you can use mine)
* Wax paper

It would be best to have your clay already conditioned and in flat sheets (at the thickest setting) so you don't have to spend time doing this at the meeting.  You'll also need to flatten some black to a #8 (thin) for the details and to outline the bird, but you can wait until the demo to do this. 


Saturday, May 8, 2010
12 noon - 4 pm
Heartland Bead Market
13440 Santa Fe Trail
Lenexa, KS 66215