The process of making the hydraulic press earrings was incredibly stressful, and time consuming, but in the long run I am quite happy with the way they turned out and pretty satisfied by the progress I have made over the course of the semester so far. I ran into many bumps in the road but these contributed to the learning process; if everything worked the first time I would be taking a lot less away with me from the project.
Initially, I planned on making a variety of seedpods, however, the Kawa Model and creating “river rock” earrings I found a much more interesting concept. In the end, it called for more research and essentially more work since instead of making the project once, I was now making it two times. I did not think about this fact when designing and honestly, I don't know if I will make earrings again for a project like this. But it is what I wanted so I am happy.
I began exploring different forms that could work for the earrings and had a few problems with how big, the weight, the shape, and the hinge. In order to work these problems out I started making the forms out of clay and holding them up to my ears in order to get a better feel. I am happy with the form I ended up choosing although they are a bit heavy on the ears.
Before making the actual project I did a variety of tests using the hydraulic press, patination, and a hinge sample because my final project I wanted to use silver. Once I thought I was ready I proceded in the siler. Apparently I was not ready because I busted through the fist piece of silver I had bought. This was pretty stressful because of the price of silver currently. Luckily, I can melt it down an reuse it later, but when this first happened I was very upset. I then bought more silver and of course did the same thing again. I am a slow learner. I was able to get 4 forms that were a bit shallower than I thought I wanted them to be but that worked out in the end although it means I could not put quite as much material as I would have liked in the earrings.
Chasing and soldering the forms together was not to big of a problem. It took a long time but I managed to get it down.
My hinge was a different story. The hinge is quite small at the bottom of the piece; I had done a smaple hinge on two pieces of flat metal but working on a 3D form was completely different. I practiced on a copper maquette first but was not successful and decided to go straight to silver. The first hinge took me about 6 hours total which was not bad for prepping everything and clean up. The 2nd one I almost gave up on. I have never struggled so much in my life. It would not work. At one point, I had to walk away. I came back the next day and was again struggling with it for hours. At one point, Rachel said "just go for a walk Anna". I did, and what do you know, after 12 hours of labor it actually worked.
The night before the project was due left me with a lot more work than I usually like to leave this close to the deadline.
Around 11 pm I was holding the earrings up to my eat to decide where I wanted to put the earring posts. I dropped one, it bounced on the floor and the seam broke in half. I was devastated, went for a walk and decided it was going to solder back right then and there.
After that, I had less problems but it the process was incredibly slow. As I got more tired things took longer but still I made progress.
In the end it was the most stressful project I have ever worked on but I would not have learned nearly as much otherwise.