Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steampunk. Show all posts

Steampunk Jewelry designer : CatherinetteRings Studio

This is where i live and create my original Stempunk jewelry design . In my apartment i have a lot of souvenirs that i collected during my travel around the world . Above my computer i have a painting made by Tibetan Monks and on the right i also have a scroll painting from China .



This is a view from the living room side ,
Near the computer area i have 2 Indonesian Mask and 1 from Thailand .
In the living room my table is an old wooden box . I often make jewelry there .



This is a few more picture of the room where Catherine has all the jewelry she makes and also where we keep most of our materials .






Steampunk jewelry made by CatherinetteRings





Onyx is a cryptocrystalline form of quartz. The colors of its bands range from white to almost every color (save some shades, such as purple or blue). Commonly, specimens of onyx available contain bands of colors of white, tan, and brown. Sardonyx is a variant in which the colored bands are sard (shades of red) rather than black. Pure black onyx is common, and perhaps the most famous variety, but not as common as onyx with banded colors.

It has a long history of use for hardstone carving and jewelry, where it is usually cut as a cabochon, or into beads, and is also used for intaglio or cameo engraved gems, where the bands make the image contrast with the ground. Some onyx is natural but much is produced by the staining of agate.

The name has sometimes been used, incorrectly, to label other banded lapidary materials, such as banded calcite found in Mexico, Pakistan, and other places, and often carved, polished and sold. This material is much softer than true onyx, and much more readily available. The majority of carved items sold as 'onyx' today are this carbonate material.

New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This week i made a few more designs with some of the Czech Glass Button i kept in my studio . I choose these button for their Retro , Modern and Victorian style. Some of them i had for a few months and i didn't have all the matching color of beads to make them . I still have much more that i need to list in my Etsy boutique this weekend . I have some amazing new Tie Tacks , some gorgeous labradorite ring and much more .

Spiral Button

Urchin Button



This is my newest Steampunk Bracelet with Brass watch movement . I want to make more like this , I plan to add similar bracelet in 4-5 weeks .



These are some of the new rings with slightly larger stones (10mm diameter).
So far i offer them with Green Amber , Red Fire Agate and Opalite.






Steampunk Jewelry : Ring with Swarovski Crystal

Steampunk Jewelry :
Ring with Swarovski Crystal

I just introduced 2 new colors of crystal : Clear White and Golden Shadow Crystal .
I will be able to offer these in size 5-12 as soon as i receive my main supply in about 2 weeks . I'm also waiting for Montana Blue and Black Diamond colors .The new Jet black Crystal are already available in different size .

New-Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Golden Shadow Crystal



New-Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Clear Crystal

Steampunk Jewelry : Ring with Swarovski Crystal

New-Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Jet Black Crystal



Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Bermuda Blue Crystal


Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Volcano Crystal

Steampunk Jewelry Ring with Meridian Blue Crystal


Steampunk Jewelry and sculpture Giveaway

Steampunk Jewelry and sculpture Giveaway
Get a chance to win Steampunk Jewelry or a Sculpture.

1st prize : Steampunk Sculpture
2nd prize : 100$ Shopping Spree .



New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This is a ring that sold on the same day it was listed on ETSY .
I used Blue fire agate and a rare watch movement crown with a sapphire jewel.

New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This is a One of a kind ring i made with a
Golden Slit pupil taxidermy reptile Glass eye


New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

Here's some new ring with Labradorite . The first one is very mechanical . I choose a contrasting copper metal to accentuate the color of the stone .




This is a ring in my Orbit model in which i use Labradorite centerpiece and 2 Spectrolite satellites

New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This is a new necklace of my Victorian Steampunk collection . I used Victorian style antiqued metal and atomic alien green beads to create a sci-fi look .
The pendant is made of an supreme quality peridot glass .


New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This is one of my favorite of the week .
This Victorian steampunk necklace is made with Antiqued metal and RARE iridescent fossil Ammonites . That specie existed around 400 million years ago and is now Extinct
New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

Labradorite and Scarab bracelet :


This is a new Steampunk Tie Tack pin with a bulova watch face.
New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

This is a pin with a watch movement .
New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week
Those are my newest Reptilian Tie Tack



New Steampunk Jewelry designs of the week

Steampunk Jewelry CHRISTMAS BOGO DEAL

Steampunk Jewelry CHRISTMAS BOGO DEAL & Giveaway :

★ ★ ★ THE DEAL ★ ★ ★

For this holiday I'm happy to offer this
BLOG and TWITTER exclusive deal .

Buy 1 item get 1 item for free of the same value & under . Just indicate the details of the free item in note to seller during check out and this Promo code :
FULL STEAM DEAL

Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Yellow orange Topaz is the stone for November and Blue Topaz for December . In the upcoming month i will be adding more topaz ring to my ETSY shop as i receive new colors .

Brandy yellow Topaz
Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Blue Mystic Topaz
Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Blue Mystic Topaz
Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Swiss Blue Topaz
Steampunk Jewelry : Topaz Ring

Color and varieties

Pure topaz is colorless and transparent but is usually tinted by impurities; typical topaz is wine, yellow, pale gray or reddish-orange, blue brown. It can also be made white, pale green, blue, gold, pink (rare), reddish-yellow or opaque to transparent/translucent.

Orange topaz, also known as precious topaz, is the traditional November birthstone, the symbol of friendship, and the state gemstone for the US State of Utah.

Imperial topaz is yellow, pink (rare, if natural) or pink-orange. Brazilian Imperial Topaz can often have a bright yellow to deep golden brown hue, sometimes even violet. Many brown or pale topazes are treated to make them bright yellow, gold, pink or violet colored. Some imperial topaz stones can fade on exposure to sunlight for an extended period of time. Blue topaz is the Texas state gemstone. Naturally occurring Blue Topaz is quite rare. Typically, colorless, gray or pale yellow and blue material is heat treated and irradiated in order to produce a more desired darker blue.

Mystic topaz is colorless topaz which has been artificially coated giving it the desired rainbow effect.

Localities and occurrence
Topaz Mountain, Utah

Topaz is commonly associated with silicic igneous rocks of the granite and rhyolite type. It typically crystallizes in granitic pegmatites or in vapor cavities in rhyolite lava flows like those at Topaz Mountain in western Utah. It can be found with fluorite and cassiterite in various areas including Ural and Ilmen mountains of Russia, in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Czech Republic, Germany, Norway, Pakistan, Italy, Sweden, Japan, Brazil, Mexico, Flinders Island and the United States.

Some clear topaz crystals from Brazilian pegmatites can reach boulder size and weigh hundreds of pounds. Crystals of this size may be seen in museum collections. The Topaz of Aurungzebe, observed by Jean Baptiste Tavernier measured 157.75 carats.

Colorless and light-blue varieties of topaz are found in Precambrian granite in Mason County, Texas within the Llano Uplift. There is no commercial mining of topaz in that area.

Etymology and historical and mythical usage

The name "topaz" is derived from the Greek Τοπάζιος (Τοpáziοs), the author of one of the first systematic treatises on minerals and gemstones dedicated two chapters on the topic in 1652.In the Middle Ages, the name topaz was used to refer to any yellow gemstone, but now the name is only properly applied to the silicate described above.

Many modern English translations of the Bible, including the King James Version mention Topaz in Exodus 28:17 in reference to a stone in the Hoshen: "And thou shalt set in it settings of stones, even four rows of stones: the first row shall be a sardius, a topaz, and a carbuncle(Garnet): this shall be the first row."

However, since these translations as topaz all derive from the Septuagint translation topazi[os], which as mentioned above referred to a yellow stone that was not topaz, but probably chrysolite, it should be borne in mind that topaz is not meant here. The masoretic text (the Hebrew on which most modern Protestant Bible translations of the Old Testament are based) has pitdah as the gem the stone is made from; some scholars think it is related to an Assyrian word meaning flashed.[citation needed] More likely, pitdah is derived from Sanskrit words (pit = yellow, dah = burn), meaning "yellow burn".

Steampunk Jewelry - Robot Ring 2

Steampunk Jewelry
Robot Ring 2





Steampunk Jewelry Relic

Necklace with clock parts and Amber



I just finished this piece and it is a collaboration between me and my better-half . I made the Pendant and she made the necklace . It is really interesting to combine our different skills to make this piece .








See this necklace on ETSY :

Steampunk Jewelry - NECKLACE - Antiqued Metal

Amber and clock parts pendant


Amber info :
Amber (or, technically, resinite) is fossilized tree resin (not sap), which has been appreciated for its color and natural beauty since neolithic times. Good quality amber is used for the manufacture of ornamental objects and jewelry. There are five classes of amber, defined on the basis of their chemical constituents.
Because it originates as a soft, sticky tree resin, amber sometimes includes animal and plant material as inclusions.

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