Tie Dye Earrings in Polymer Clay
by Octopus whisperer in Craft > Jewelry
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Tie Dye Earrings in Polymer Clay
This is one of my favorite patterns. It's simple to make but creates beautiful patterns that are great for colorful jewelry.
Supplies
- 2 main colors of polymer clay. I used Fimo professional true red, and Fimo soft peppermint. An equal amount of white clay (I used Fimo professional white).
- A pasta machine for conditioning clay and making skinner blends.
- pliers (best to have 2)
- sharp blades (I have a pack of 3 Fimo brand blades, but I also used exacto knife blades).
- Wet sand paper (450, 800, 1500)
- Small hand drill
- Jump rings and findings for earrings
- A ceramic tile or glass plate make the best work and baking surface. I currently don't have any so I use a sturdy plastic sheet that can be wiped off for working, and an old baking tin for the oven (careful - some plastics react badly with clay)
- Alcohol wipes - for cleaning your hands and surfaces while you work.
- (oven for baking the clay)
Skinner Blends
Make two skinner blends - White to Red and White to Peppermint. You can find great video tutorials online for making skinner blends!
- Put the main color through the thickest setting of the pasta machine to get a rectangle.
- Put the same amount of white through the thickest setting of the pasta machine to get a rectangle.
- Cut each rectangle in half at an angle and stack - creating almost a triangle.
- Fit the white and color triangle together. You should leave some section of color without white, and some section of white without color.
- Run it through the pasta machine on the thickest setting. Make sure that its put through so that both colors are touching the machine every time.
- Fold in half and run through the pasta machine again.
- Repeat the process while getting thinner on the pasta machine. Make sure not to let the clay spread sideways too much.
- When it is blended run it through the machine from white toward red on a low setting creating a long ribbon.
- Roll each of the long ribbons into a log with the white inside.
Making Triangle Units
- Stand the log up on the end and cut from the top down into quarters. Each one of these pieces now has to be shaped.
- The unit needs to be a triangle. But rather than just pressing the colored part flat, you want to pull the white from the tip down to cover the sides.
- The end result is a triangular unit with two faces mostly white, and one face color.
- You should have 4 of each color.
Assembling the Cane
- I used 4 triangles from peppermint and 3 triangles from the red.
- Place them alternating (like in the picture), and press them together lightly.
- make a triangle log that is only red and add it on top.
- You can also add a small peppermint sheet on the bottom.
- Squeeze the cane to connect all the pieces. Make sure you are squeezing from all side so as not to distort the shape too much.
- Some distortion will always happen at the ends of the cane, just trim the ends off.
Slicing and Baking
- When the can is pressed to the desired size and shape, use the thinnest blade to make even slices.
- Burn the slices according to the manufacturers instructions.
Finishing Up
- Sand the baked slices - I use wet sand paper 450, 800 and 1500.
- Mark the location of the holes. Place the pieces on a piece of wood and drill through with a hand drill.
- Add jump rings and assemble the earings.