Coloraddiction

October 17, 2007

Tried & True: Effetre 081 Dark Lavender

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 1:59 am
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dark lavender Ahhh the first color I fell in love with way back when. I was messing around with 081 and its sister 221 Pale Lavender Opaque even before I was messing with pink glass.

Dark Lavender 081 is a desperately cool color - and it does magic, too! The color came out around the same time I started making beads - and at first glance didn’t look that much different than the regular 080 Pale Lavender Transparent or the totally mis-named 082 Lavender Blue (it’s pink. I swear.).

In general, 081 is significantly more saturated than the other two colors - a deep, rich lavender that will enhance any color you layer it over.

The first thing you should know about 081 is that it turns pale blue under fluorescent lighting. Just like any other lavender in any of the glass lines that I know if. There’s something weird about lavender glass that causes that reaction - I notice it happens with lavender beads of any kind - seeds, Czech, you name it. If it’s lavender, and it’s glass, it will do this weird washed out blue thing under fluorescents. But under incandescent lighting, the lavender color really pops.

The second thing you want to keep in mind about this glass is that batch matters. With this color you really want clarity - and there are some batches of this color out there that are so scratched up and scummy, that you’ll want to pull your hair out. Do yourself a huge favor and try to find a way to hand-pick the rods, or buy from a vendor you really trust. Because if you get a crappy batch of this color, the rods will scum up and bubble like the worst of the aquas - and we all know how bad those can be. Same goes with the pale 080 version of this color.

Once you get the right rod of Dark Lavender, you can create the most gorgeous, varied purples with it. It’s a gorgeous color on its own, but really can make any shade of purple in the palette pop right out. Encase Dark Amethyst in this color and watch the brown overtones just disappear. Ahhhh purple. Encase Pale Lavender in Dark Lavender for a springy pale treat. Do the same with Pastel Ink Blue and you have a subtle lilac shade.

081 is the perfect stiffness for sculpturing and for encasing - and it works well with most every other color without reactions or striking woes. Encase stripes with this and they will have an ethereal quality to them.

081 isn’t a rare color anymore - most every vendor who carries Effetre has it at a decent price point - and some even give it away as a gift when you order a certain amount of glass. Just make sure you’re getting the rods that aren’t scratched and scummy. There’s nothing worse than gorgeous but unusable glass. And now, on to the eye-candy!

moonlit magenta

totally

lavender rain

winter pixie

summer magic

Girl’s Day Out

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings, Creativity — by coloraddiction @ 1:20 am
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So I had some serious cabin fever today.  Since I am doing a project for Step By Step Beads, and have a very limited amount of time to get some supplies, I decided to take a little trip to Shipwreck Beads.  I love living in Washington, because not only am I within driving distance of half a dozen glass manufacturers and dealers, I am also only a short 1 1/2 hours away from one of the largest bead stores ever. Shipwreck mostly does mail order and online sales, but they also have a storefront in Lacey.  Okay, make that a……warehouse. Because OMG……it’s huge!

I’d never been there before today, and let me just say this:  It’s a damn good thing they have a little deli/cafe thingie in the middle of the store, because I needed to keep my blood sugar up and myself caffeinated for this place. I’ve never seen a bead store this gigantic. I literally had issues with my eyes going wiggy after about 30 minutes in there. The sheer amount of color and sparkle will most likely cause Sensory!Overload! for anyone who is a creative soul.

As for selection - it’s pretty good, as you may imagine.  I mean, after all, did I mention the size of the building?  I was a little surprised by the total lack of selection of decent findings there - unfortunately.  Most of what they had was base metal, and what they did have of good metal was really generic. But the rest of the merchandise made up for that lack.

They have an amazing amount of Czech glass beads - it seemed like that pretty much took up half the store.  any size/color/finish you can imagine in Czech - it’s there.  I had to yank my eyes away from the gorgeous firepolished stuff after I picked out a couple things I needed.

Another quarter of the store seemed to be taken up by giant bins of bagged generic Indian glass beads - which was kind of off-putting for me.  I am a glass bead snob - I don’t apologize for it.  :D  Which brings us to the gi-normous aisle of Chinese lampwork beads….ahh well.  Didn’t see any artist-made lampwork, but I wasn’t expecting to, since they are a high-volume online and mail order seller mostly. I usually only see the handmade stuff in smaller bead stores. 

One nice thing is that they had a decent selection of both Swarovski and Preciosa brand crystal beads, in a bunch of different shapes and colors.  Two whole aisles of crystals - I spent a lot of time in that section. It literally caused me pain to have to leave that area without buying a whole lot more than I did. In a store like that, you need to stay on track or you’re sunk.  Hence the name.

I was desperate for more Bali/Thai sterling beads, but alas, there were almost none to be found there.  They did have some sterling, but it was mostly unidentifiable and pretty generic.  They did have a few nice toggle clasps, but they were really expensive. Most of the sterling was - but that’s no surprise in this economy.

As for gemstones - yep, they have em.  Hanging all over one of the walls and taking up a couple of aisles of their own.  I had to refrain, but they had some really great choices.  I drooled over all of them and had to walk away.  Sniff.  They also had a decent selection of books, stringing materials, bead storage and tools.

That’s all I can honestly remember, because it’s all becoming a blur of color now that I am home with my modest purchase of $33.77.  I am sure Shipwreck has way more than I have mentioned here…you’ll just have to take a trip there and check it out.  Try not to have a time limit or a….um….budget. :D

October 13, 2007

Don’t I have anything better to do?

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings, Color — by coloraddiction @ 1:41 am
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Apparently not….LOL

November Suite

Earth & Sky

80's Chick

Lavender Rain

Moonlit Magenta

Corduroy Twist

October 9, 2007

Even More Color Palettes. I Can’t Stop.

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings, Color — by coloraddiction @ 12:29 pm
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I made some more palettes. Oh, help. :)

Executive Sweet

At Home

Summer's End

Witchy

Jester

Slumber

Autumn Glow

Afternoon Storm

October 8, 2007

This Just In - Colour Lovers

Filed under: A Beadmaker's Musings, Color — by coloraddiction @ 3:50 pm
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Oh, no.  Another color website to hook you in.  And this one is a doooozy!  Create your own palettes and colors, and see what others are creating!  It’s like a blog, where you can rate and comment on others’ color offerings.  There are zillions of possibilities for inspiration and pure time-wasting.  Bask in the bliss of color. And don’t shoot the messenger!

COLOURlovers

Here are some of the palettes I have created:

Yum

Tropical Spring

The Mystic

September

Egyptian Princess

Tiffany Chocolates

Rising Star: Vetrofond 942 Poppy (aka Watermelon) Odd

Filed under: Glass Colors — by coloraddiction @ 10:37 am
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poppyOne of Vetrofond’s more recent Odd Lot selections, this color is….interesting. When I saw the picture of Poppy on Frantz Art Glass’s newsletter, I got excited. When I finally was able to order some, and saw the rod color for myself, my heart started pounding. Because - and I say this with the most maturity possible - OMG!!!! The rod color is just the most delicious shade of bright pinky-coral-glowy-juicy-watermelon imaginable.

If only the glass stayed that color when melted. **heartbreak**

Don’t get me wrong - this is still a lovely, cheerful color. But for the most part, it stays a bright coral orange, and loses a lot of its translucent pink quality. The color variances in this glass really depend on your ability to strike it. It’s VERY picky about temperature and timing.

This color reminds me a little bit of the first batch of ASK 104 Passionate Pink - back when that color first came out. Poppy shares that color’s way of responding to temperature.

The glass itself is somewhat stiff - and turns a weird sparkly grey in the flame. When you strike it, the surface can turn a murky orange brown - and that’s kind of what you’re looking for. The darker the bead when you put it into the kiln, the brighter orange you get when it comes out of the kiln. Most of the time. Did I mention this glass is really picky?

Encasing this color in any pale pink or clear transparent yields a pretty, pale creamsicle color. I love this, because you can’t get that pale of a color with most of your typical orange shades.

Poppy almost never comes out as a solid color after annealing. It usually has quite a few striations of color ranging from coral pink to sunshine orange on the same bead.

This is one of the only colors I have that I really wish would stay the same shade as the rod. Hopefully Vetrofond will figure out a way! But it’s still really lovely. Get some, especially if you love juicy summer colors.

 

poppy test beads

tangerine dreams

shadowplay

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