The White Horses in this variant are the same size as the earlier pendant, but in this commission they were requested to be on a green background. Each horse is in a silver oval with the edge about the same height as the horse. The green, low temperature enamel provides the required colour, but only as a relatively thin layer so that the horse stands proud of the enamel – a reversal of the real thing where the white chalk layer is slightly below ground level (if I remember correctly). These pendants are Christmas gifts from a mother to three daughters. As ever when I make multiples, as each was hand cut separately, they have minor differences.
Jewellery and other siilverware based on the Uffington White Horse is available in my shop here.
Recalling a private joke between a mother and two daughters, I was asked to make a pair of snails as ornaments. I’ve made frogs, ducks, cats and dogs so why not!
They remind me of Brian on ‘The Magic Roundabout’. They are about 45mm wide.
This is my second pectoral cross – this time for Abbot Thomas of Mucknell Abbey. Mucknell Abbey is home to a Benedictine community of men and women within the Church of England.
Abbot Thomas had a clear idea of what he wanted and we worked together to finalise the design. The hand engraved groove was contracted out as this isn’t a skill I am comfortable with. The cross is about 70 cm wide and weighs about 50g. It is hallmarked on the rear.
This beautiful Roman coin stamped from gold sheet is in excellent condition. The sheet was probably hammered out from a small ball, hence its irregular shape. Though the die and punch are round, the sheet was not then trimmed after stamping. The mount I made for it is simple, so not as detract from the coin and is completely non destructive. The coin is gently pinched in place. A window in the back of the mount gives a good view of the reverse of the coin.
This pair of rings are probably twice the weight of the commercial equivalents. I know a man who does the engraving – letter, size and font as chosen by the client.
The horse is about 5cm long and at the limit of my skills to cut from silver sheet. For this commission, it was important that the horse was as realistic as possible and so it had to be on a backing as two legs are not connected to the body in reality. Also the mechanical strength of the silver would mean that a freestanding version would be too vulnerable to damage.
Jewellery and other siilverware based on the Uffington White Horse is available in my shop here.
2/6 – half a crown or 12.5d in new(! post 1971) money. This is will make a pendant of interest for someone. It is 50% silver so worth more than face value. The silver band is formed around the coin, so it is very secure, but does not damage the coin in any way so my method is safe for all sizes and value of coin. I have some Roman bronze coins mounted this way in my shop.
It’s the same lantern as the earrings in the post below, but here is one with a clear stone as a pendant. Also from this angle, you can just see the hallmark lasered on the base. The lantern is 12mm across and weighs about 5g.
It is available to buy from my shop, or contact me if you want a different stone.
These are a development from a recent commission – I like this design better. It reminds me of a lantern that someone might carry from the large ring. These are fitted with green and garnet cubic zirconia to represent navigation lights, but clear or other colour coould be used instead. The lanterns are hallmarked on the base. These are available from my shop.
Over the years, I’ve cast a range of nuts, fruit stones and seeds – walnuts, acorns, nectarines, dates, pecan….. Olives seeds and hazelnuts in the form of pendants or cufflinks have proved the most popular. I recently did a silver nutmeg and now I have just cast some apricot stones – because I haven’t done it before and ate some fresh apricots!
I’ve cast both whole stones and a half stone that has a chain loop added so that it can be used as a pendant.
The pendant is available from my shop. Should you want a full stone, please contact me.
I’ve made a few silver spanners over the years. The first one was in the early 1990s I think. They are cast in one or two cuttlefish bones depending on whether there is a flat side for engraving or not.
Casting always has some failures. In the case one half of the spanner wasn’t good enough, but there’s nothing wrong with the half you can see and I thought a key ring might be a good gift for a mechanic or engineer. You can buy this in my shop.
The blade is from an old wooden handled knife of my father. I think it’s a small paring knife – the blade is 5cm long. Whether it is a family heirloom or something he picked up for 5p in a car boot sale I will never know!
I decided to make a silver handle for it. This is a salt casting, with a tube beneath to take the knife tang.
The hallmark on the silver was new to me. I had included the blade when it was sent to the London Assay Office. They chose not to punch the marks as I expected, but lazered them on adding ‘+Metal’ to allow for the iron blade.
I’ve had stainless steel brooch pins stamped ‘METAL’ before, but never the base metal unscathed and the hallmark done like this. Not that I mind at all – it just wasn’t what I expected.
These were a commission for the birthday of the wife of a local boat owner and aimed to replicate the old style oil lantern type lamp. (Port is the on the left when facing the prow of a boat and is the red light.)
These rings are designed to fit around an engagement ring or other ring with a large stone. They are really example pieces to show what I can make – in silver or gold – but these two are available in my shop.
This necklace is a commissioned piece to substitute for one that went missing. The main links are 20 by 25 mm and the whole piece weighs 100g. It has a toggle bar clasp which allows some adjustment of the length to suit different clothes. The bar can go through any of link of the other end of the chain, though it does then get a little asymmetric if it is shortened too much.
This picture gives a closeup of the links and the assay markings.
This beautiful slice is an example of eclogite, clearly showing the garnet inclusions. Quoting Wikipedia – ‘Eclogite typically results from high-pressure metamorphism of mafic igneous rock (typically basalt or gabbro) as it plunges into the mantle in a subduction zone’. I was asked by the Department of Earth Sciences at Oxford University, just up the road from me, to create a pendant based on the specimen as a gift for a leaving colleague. The Department has a logo of symbolic mountain ranges, so I decided to reflect that in the border.
The problem with making an egg timer is how to secure in place the glass vial that actually holds the sand. I came up with a less conventional solution here, but decided to also make a pretty conventional one and this is the result.
In this case one of the sets of domes are more like push fit rivets that fit into the tubular columns when the glass vial is in place. You need to get the height of the columns just right!
A Beatrix Potter enthusiast saw that I had mounted coins for pendants in the past, including 50p coins. However she wanted two mounted together – one slightly overlapping the other.
I had to devise a new method of creating the mounts, but the process worked well. In principle, I could mount other coins the same way.
I have two of these in stock at present a smaller one and a larger one. By the process that they are made, each one is unique and they are a statement piece – probably not to be worn every day. Shop
By contrast
These three pendants are good for daily wear. Shop
The second of two major commissions this financial year is a silver plough. (The first was the Abingdon Trinity morse).
The plough is fully hallmarked and formed from sterling silver sheet and wire section. It weighs about 80 grams on its own and is about 125mm long.
It is modeled on a Ferguson three furrow plough that a friend owns and kindly allowed me to photograph and measure.
My plough isn’t an exact copy that would be much more time consuming, but you’ll see the resemblance. The trophy will be used as a prize in a ploughing competition.
It proved to be quite a challenge, but I and the purchaser are very pleased with the end result.
Each leaf is about 36mm by 20mm and has a concealed hinge to allow good flexibility of the necklace around the next. There is a degree of adjustment available by the positioning of the catch on the chain.
Earrings to match of course. The earrings and a brooch are available in my shop.
All pieces are hallmarked – by laser to avoid the marking showing through to the front.
My full sized clothes pegs are a steady selling item, but they are a lot of work, heavy and so expensive. I saw some tiny wooden pegs so I thought I would make some small silver ones.
This is the result. They are about 25mm long and weigh just four grams. They use the metal springs from the small wooden clothes pegs as silver wire of that gauge would have no strength at all. These have a fairiy reasonable grip. They can be purchased in my shop.
For this piece, I worked from a crisp photograph of the two children. The challenge was to capture enough to make the boys recognisable – at least to their families. Fortunately the donor and recipient were both delighted with the result.
A full sized solid silver clothes peg. It’s about 75mm long and weighs just under 70g and is available from my shop. This is an alternative to the textured version of the peg mentioned here.
if you need to count repetitive events – for me swimming lengths – then a ring or maybe two like these are essential. They fit on the index finger and are rotated with the thumb. Rotate one ring every two lengths by one quarter of a turn. That gives you an eight length counter. If you have another on the other index finger and rotate that a quarter every time the other does one revolution then you can count to 32. Available from my shop.
A rather unusual design for an egg timer, but it conveniently solves the problem of how to get the glass vial into the frame. The oval is pulled apart to allow the vial to slip into the domes and so is under very little pressure. This unique piece is available from my shop.
What do you do with a pair of cow horns? Turn them into drinking vessels with smart silver banding of course. I was asked to make these two pieces of silver to make the drinking experience more pleasant. The silver is more than just a ring, but curls over the lip and inside the horn to provide a pleasant experience for ones lips. The rings are fully hallmarked fine silver and the silver has been formed to follow the contours of the horn. inside and out. For security, hygiene and to prevent moisture traps, the rings are bedded in with food safe adhesive/ sealant.
As a change from mounting coins into cufflinks and 50p coins into pendants, I was asked to set two silver sixpences and one silver threepence as you can see above. These will be gifts – the coins having sentimental value. The band is fine silver (99.9%) which is so soft that it can be manually worked over the edge of the coin to give a tight grip.
Always one for a challenge – I was asked to make a sand dollar. What’s a sand dollar you ask – as I did. It’s a form of sea urchin.
This is an example about 5 cm across – about the largest I can cope with. As 10 cm is a more typical size, I can only assume it became deceased prematurely as the markings are not as pronounced as larger specimens. It does , just, show the typical five fold symmetry I find fascinating.
I’ve managed to get quite a good cast of it – pleasingly retaining the detail.
This one is sold, but I’ll be making another – should you be interested!
To complement my bee pendants and brooches, I’ve now created some bee earrings.
These bees are about 30mm wingtip to wingtip and available with various ear fittings. In the examples shown, the thorax and abdomen are gold-plated. However, the bees could bee plain silver, all gold-plated and maybe even bands on the abdomen. Available from my shop.
One exciting commission I received was to endeavour to make a morse. (A morse is a large clasp or brooch on the front of an ecclesiastical cope.) The one I made was worn by Bishop Rowan Williams, the former Archbishop of Canterbury, at a service at St Helens Church Abingdon in May. (Photos to follow.) The morse will be recorded in the church terrier (inventory) as part of the church silver. It is 75mm in diameter.
The design incorporates semi- precious stones whose colours would reflect the theology-in- colour of the three angelic visitors in Rubliev’s icon. The Father is betokened by a large stone of lapis lazuli at the centre of the morse; blue is the colour signaling divinity. The Son is betokened by four garnets roughly in the shape of a cross; red signals the blood of sacrifice. Five peridot stones ‘fly’ out toward the edge; light green signals the Spirit, the ‘giver of life’.
The donor expressed the wish that the morse have Celtic Christian features too. So, the morse is round and slightly bowed to recall the Celtic ‘lorica’ or breastplate. The first line of the lorica prayer ascribed to St Patrick himself, I bind unto myself today the strong name of the Trinity, is engraved on the morse following the spiral in which the stones are set.
The life of the Trinity thus spirals out in the act of creation, and draws creation and humankind back to itself in redemption and sanctification.
My thanks to Revd Dr Charles Miller who commissioned the piece and provided the interprettion of the symbolism above.
A gift from a geologist to a vulcanologist. The pendant is just under 4cm at the base and takes its shape from Cotopaxi in Ecuador. It has a reticulated surface to provide texture on the slopes. To provide interest, what would normally be a silver ring for the chain has been replaced by two 9ct gold circles to give an impression of an eruption. The hallmarks are punched on the rear.
I don’t do much work with coloured stones – just when a stone or mineral excites my interest, but if my customer wants stones, then stones they shall have.
The design is meant to look like a wrapped sweet. Teasing the design a little further, I was assked to gold plate the area around the stones, as you see below.
The plating is pen plating and very thin so suited to being in the well.
Matching earrings are available in my shop and also a slightly different variant of the sweetie pendant.
This thimble was commissioned to mark one of those ‘special’ birthdays. Apart from being a keen sempstress, the recipient also loved gardening. Hence the initial ‘F’ is meant to look like a branch and the rear has representations of leaves.
The thimble is fabricated from sheet with both bright and satin textures. I was given a thimble that fits in order to get the size right – the tricky bit. It is, of course, hallmarked.
From the giver – ‘F++++++++ is delighted with it, so thanks again for your time and work.’
From the recipient – ‘ I’m emailing to say thank you for making my lovely thimble. I’m really pleased with the design and finish. I have been using it for sewing already and it fits very well and does everything a thimble should do! So thanks again’
Not much else to say other than I made a plain one as a commission and decided to do something a little more in the style of my cat, duck and frog brooches.
I’ve previously made a treble clef to fit into a wooden peg to clip the score on a music stand that can also be detached and used as a brooch.
I was asked to do the same as a gift, but with an initial J replacing the clef. My customer expected it to be used as a paper organiser, but the recipient likes it immensely and intends to wear it as a brooch.
As delivered, the upper bar was fixed to the lower bar with thread through the lugs. I’ve replaced this with a tube and pin fitting rather than a solid wire or small rivets on each lug.
A recent commission, this pendant is a new style of work for me called fold forming. The stone is a beautiful Swiss blue topaz with a four claw setting to hold the stone in the fold. The beauty of the faceted, transparent topaz is enhanced by the silver reflecting light to and from the stone. The bulk of the metal is fine silver, but because of the chain, it is hallmarked as sterling.
I shall be doing more work using this technique which will end up in my shop in due course.
A recent commission has been a matching set of napkin rings for a special event. To remind the owners of the time they walked the Thames path, the napkins each have a representation of the Thames Path from Lechlade to Walton.
What you see on the left is the north bank formed from an extra layer of silver, whilst on the right hand side the south bank is thicker using the other part of the silver sheet – economical on silver! Hence the napkins are a sort of ‘half a sixpence’. The section of the path seen here is from Oxford at the top and Reading at the bottom, with Radley in the middle. The rings are deeper than normal to accomodate the route without compression. They are hallmarked and engraved on the insided.
I have all my wisdom teeth – they are in a box in a drawer in my bedroom! When my daughter recently had one of hers out, it inspired me to find mine and then I thought I would cast one to add to my collection of oddities. Not yet in my shop, but available for sale for a pendant, charm or keyfob. Contact me.
A recent commission has been to make a shell to be used during a christening.
This shell is about three inches wide and is inspired by a scallop shell. In developing the idea I cast a sea shell, but, at 1.5 inches across it was too small to be practical in the ceremony. The detail on the outer shell has come out well in the casting.
That inspired me to cast something larger and I bought an example of Pseudopecten acuticosta. The fossil was found in Gloucestershire and is about 170 million years old. It is about 2.25 inches across. It is only a half section, recessed on the other side, so could be used for a baptism though it doesn’t hold much water.
As developments of the original commission, the image below shows a shell shape that doesn’t have a handle.
And finally, for now…
This shell is a pressing based on the fossil above. It is nearer 2.5 inches across and very suitable for a baptism shell.
All bar the top shell are available for sale in my shop.
To be fitted on the shaft of a walking stick. I’ve previously made ferrules and covers for rubber ferrules. I didn’t do the engraving, but I know a man who can.
Over the years, I’ve cast a number of different sort of nut and seed/pip. The most popular is the hazelnut, usually as a pendant, but sometimes as a brooch or cufflinks. Until now, I’ve never made a silver nutmeg, but here they are
Solid, life sized, hallmarked and weighing about 40g each, they join my collection of silver nectarine seeds, silver brazil nuts, silver walnuts, silver olive seeds, silver hazelnuts, silver almonds, silver acorns and silver pistachios. You can buy a nutmeg via this link.
Different nuts and golden pears by special request only!
These earrings are 8mm wide and 12mm long. they have a dappled effect on what is currently the front side and a plain side to the rear, but they could be reversed. They are also available with stud fittings. Available in my shop. I can make other sizes or finishes on request.
The inner band of this ring is surrounded by three silver wires, two of which form claws for the stone and the inner actually forms the ring. It’s a new design for me to accomodate a deep stone, which I think is peridot, though my client thought was citrine.
This recent commission was completed a few weeks ago, but embargoed until the gifts were given. The basic design of the dragon was provided by the client and I translated it in silver.
The pendant is laser engraved with initials on the front and a date on the rear. All are laser hallmarked.