Sometimes the only way I can get through tortuous tasks is to set myself incentives. I'll allow myself to do something I do enjoy, if I finish something that I don't enjoy so much first. So it has been this week.
I simply love making things. My mind is perpetually full of ideas and shapes and there are simply never enough hours in the day to bring them to life. But the peril of being productive with work is that I then have to photograph, measure and describe the finished pieces in order to even have the vaguest chance of selling them. Necessary to fund my addiction.

So I set myself a target yesterday to list a batch of 9 pieces just finished and photographed before I would allow myself anywhere near metal. And I stuck to it, tempting though the lure of my tools was. So now, I'm free for the rest of the day to actually get my hands on some metal. Unfortunately, this didn't actually make much inroad into my backlog either - to which I can now add a further handful of new pieces not even included in the 9 piece target I set myself.

But I have now reached the milestone of 100 pieces in my Etsy shop and I'm approaching 400 pieces in my own shop too - although that number includes some optional extras and now-sold unique pieces - which I leave in place to serve as a portfolio.


In line with comments I've made in previous blogs, my recent pieces have all been on related design themes - once you sort out a particular design element or perfect a shape or technique, related items just flow from the initial design, so my work always emerges in batches of closely related pieces.


And this week has been no different. I honed a technique to allow me to symmetrically wire wrap stones to other shapes and I've made several earrings and pendants along those lines this week.


2 comments:
More wonderful neat work. And you photograph them so well. You put me to shame.
Thank you kindly Fiona. My jewellery photographs have taken a very long time and many thousands of shots to get to a workflow that works well for me. I'm an experienced photographer, but this took a long time to get right.
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