I'm thrilled to announce I'm scheduled to teach Jewelry I and II as adjunct faculty for Phoenix College this fall!
I'll still be working at the Heard (they are so great to be so flexible. I really do have awesome bosses!) and at the Mesa Arts Center where I'll be teaching enameling there plus some workshops in chains and champleve enamel. It's going to be a busy schedule!!!
If you are interested in taking classes in metals, check out Phoenix College and the Mesa Arts Center!
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Friday, June 22, 2012
Understanding Blend Modes in Photoshop/ Photoshop Elements
Here is another handout for my Photoshop Elements students. This information came from http://www.photoshopgurus.com/tutorials/t010.html. As stated on the photoshopgurus site, this info can be found in the help files but it's nice to have a consolidated version. I formatted it for ease of printing and saved to PDF. This is a really helpful handout to understand Blend Modes and how they can affect your image.
Click here to open/ download the handout.
Remember to try and get some play time in with the program before next week!
Click here to open/ download the handout.
Remember to try and get some play time in with the program before next week!
Saturday, June 9, 2012
New Section of Intro to Enameling
My Wednesday class was closed and there were still people wanting to register so we split it into 2 sections. If you still want to take Intro to Enameling, you can sign up for either the Wednesday or Friday (6.30-9.30) class. The Wednesday class has already started but the Friday class starts next week June 15. Call the Mesa Arts Center at 480-644-6500 to register.
Photo Basics for my PE10 Students
As requested, I'm uploading the PP I made on photo basics. Starting with a good photo is the foundation for getting a great photo in Pshop. This slideshow goes over some of the differences between point and shoot and dslr cameras, their pros and cons, and some of the most important features to have control over. Please email me if you have any questions!
Click here to download the Power Point slideshow
Full disclosure: the images used were taken from multiple websites. I can't claim credit for any of them.
Click here to download the Power Point slideshow
Full disclosure: the images used were taken from multiple websites. I can't claim credit for any of them.
Sunday, June 3, 2012
Mesa Arts Center Classes start Monday!
The summer session is here for MAC classes! We have a great lineup, which you can check out at our dedicated site for the jewelry program: www.macjewelryclasses.com or at the official Mesa Arts Center website: www.mesaartscenter.com.
I'll be teaching an 8 week enameling class for beginners and continuing students wishing to work on their own projects with instructor access.
I'm also offering an 8 week Introduction to Photoshop Elements class, which still needs one more person. It starts Thursday 6.30-9pm and I'll cover camera basics, and how to optimize and funk up your photos using the much more affordable Photoshop Elements although if you have Photoshop, I'll cover that as well. There's still time to register! Contact me at my yahoooooo! address: hjewelclark if you have any questions :-)
I'll be teaching an 8 week enameling class for beginners and continuing students wishing to work on their own projects with instructor access.
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I know you've seen this before but I'll just include it here again to give you an idea of the range of enamels. From left to right: raku, cloisonne, painting, sifting/sgraffito/inlay |
I'm also offering an 8 week Introduction to Photoshop Elements class, which still needs one more person. It starts Thursday 6.30-9pm and I'll cover camera basics, and how to optimize and funk up your photos using the much more affordable Photoshop Elements although if you have Photoshop, I'll cover that as well. There's still time to register! Contact me at my yahoooooo! address: hjewelclark if you have any questions :-)
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
SNAG is here!
Well, the Society of North American Goldsmiths conference is here in Phoenix this week and we started off the events right with some fabulous pre-conference workshops at MAC. Last Friday, Saturday and Sunday we were privileged to host David Huang teaching chasing on vessels. I'll post more photos as I have time of the other presenters for Demo Days and of the conference itself which starts today. Here are a few photos to give you an idea of what David's workshop was about.
You can learn more about David and his amazing work here:
www.davidhuang.org
More to follow!!!!!
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Everyone is working and getting to know each other. |
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David is demonstrating tool making here |
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David's chasing tools |
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This is a student piece in process. David brought spun vessel blanks for people to work on and some people brought already raised vessels. |
You can learn more about David and his amazing work here:
www.davidhuang.org
More to follow!!!!!
Sunday, April 1, 2012
More Graphic Work
for the store co-op at the MAC. This took a long time. The total size is 48 inches by 60 inches and is on view in front of the Ikeda theatre and at the box office in the studios building.
Monday, January 16, 2012
Future Plans
I've been watching my cat Ollie and our dog Oscar grow up together for a couple of years now. We brought them home within a week of each other and they were both about 8 weeks old. They have quite a dynamic relationship and they love each other very much. But they do go at it and I've had this idea to start filming them (and with my new phone, I can!) and create a YouTube channel called "The Ollie and Oscar Show". Since I haven't yet bothered to set up a YouTube channel and I don't have that many segments and I don't have any video editing software, I'm going to debut one of the pieces I've shot with no editing here! Enjoy!
The Ollie and Oscar Show, Episode 1: Smackdown
The Ollie and Oscar Show, Episode 1: Smackdown
Sunday, January 8, 2012
Oh, and I'm still teaching....
Enameling- Beginning to Advanced at the Mesa Arts Center
Wednesdays 6-9pm starting January 18- May 9! 16 weeks.
Enameling: Introduction to Advanced
Instructor: Jewel Clark
Classroom: Lapidary Studio
ages 16 and older /16 weeks
Wednesdays 6-9pm starting January 18- May 9! 16 weeks.
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Some enameling samples, from L-R: Raku, cloisonne, painting and sgraffito/carving/sifting |
Instructor: Jewel Clark
- Enameling is the ancient art of fusing ground colored glass to a metal surface.
- Please visit http://www.glass-on-metal.com/intro_to_enamel/ for a detailed explanation if you would like to learn more about the process.
- Students will learn the basics of enameling: metal prep, sifting, enamel chemistry, and firing.
- Specific techniques include: stencils, wet-packing, raku, basse-taille and more, such as cloisonne, foil, separation and crackle, as the pace of the class allows.
- This class is designed to give the beginning student a strong foundation in enamel techniques.
- Returning students may sit in on lectures and/ or work on their own projects with access to instructor help.
- Make sure our registrar has your email address for contact by instructor prior to the class.
- No class Nov 23
Classroom: Lapidary Studio
ages 16 and older /16 weeks
CAW12JE005-01 | W | Jan 18- May 9 | 6- 9pm | $278R | $333NR |
So.... it's been a while.....
Well, well, well. It's been a long and busy winter. I have done almost no art. On top of a very busy work and freelance schedule I've been recovering from an upper respiratory infection and I found out the excruciating pain in my back is being caused by a compressed disc in my back. Not the kind of thing one wants to hear at my age. I've done some graphic work for the MAC Artist's Cooperative Store- a rack card, and I'm about to submit designs for window cling.
This is the front and back of the rack card. I will hopefully have that done tonight and then I've got websites to start working on! I'm pretty excited about those because they are for some really neat people so if I don't get any other artwork done for me, I'll at least have fun working for them :-)
This is the front and back of the rack card. I will hopefully have that done tonight and then I've got websites to start working on! I'm pretty excited about those because they are for some really neat people so if I don't get any other artwork done for me, I'll at least have fun working for them :-)
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Is this Sweet or What?
Found this recently while researching web info for a talk I'll be giving. It's amazing what random things I am led to on the web when I swear I'm doing legitimate research!
Check it out for yourself here.
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The Anonymous Hugging Wall |
Where's a picture of that rabbit with the watch from Alice in Wonderland when you need it?
I can't even begin to express how stupidly busy I've been since summer started. I foolishly thought I'd have all this time to work on new art and I foolishly thought I'd be able to accomplish it while taking a welding class and teaching 2 classes of my own, one of which is still fairly new so I had to make lots more samples than I already had. AND, the MAC decided to turn their museum shop into an artist's cooperative and I applied in both photo and metals and got both accepted so I had to get work ready: files to the printer, jewelry cleaned, glass for frames, frames, display material, yadda, yadda, yadda. And I have freelance webwork in there. Oh, and did I mention that full time job I still have? And to top it off, I've missed every show deadline that I wanted to make for fall. Oy!!!!!
Anyway, enough kvetching. I have loads of photos of work, play (we did go to Vegas-first timers) for a few days thanks to the gracious invitation of dear friends Becky and Marilou, and interesting things lined up to blog about, so stay tuned.
One thing that I recently did was buy a truly ergonomic keyboard by Kinesis.
Being on the computer all day at work with a cr*ppy old standard keyboard was making my thumbs numb and not helping the tendonitis or arthritis and even my old old old MS natural keyboard wasn't helping so I did what I always do and went researching on the web for something truly ergonomic. There's not much out there that is touted as truly ergonomic but this keyboard got consistently good reviews from programmers and professionals who sit in front of a computer all day. So, despite the hefty price tag and steep learning curve to re-learn where the "Enter", "Space", and "Backspace" and oh-so-many-more keys are I went ahead and ordered one. I am slowly typing on it as I write now and I have to say that my hands don't feel better (the tendonitis seems to be kicking in and my left thumb feels a little numb) but I'm hoping that's just because I'm struggling to type being so thrown off by the unusual design. Most reviews on Amazon said the learning curve was 1-2 weeks. Wish me luck.....
Anyway, enough kvetching. I have loads of photos of work, play (we did go to Vegas-first timers) for a few days thanks to the gracious invitation of dear friends Becky and Marilou, and interesting things lined up to blog about, so stay tuned.
One thing that I recently did was buy a truly ergonomic keyboard by Kinesis.
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Looks weird, right? |
Sunday, July 24, 2011
While I'm still strugglingto catch up....
I came across this nifty art piece involving knitting:
365 Knitting Clock
Click here to view the article. The link is to an article rather than the artist's website because the article has way more info and photos. You can view the artist's website here. The clock knits a 2 meter long scarf in a year. What a great concept.
365 Knitting Clock
Click here to view the article. The link is to an article rather than the artist's website because the article has way more info and photos. You can view the artist's website here. The clock knits a 2 meter long scarf in a year. What a great concept.
Saturday, July 9, 2011
This is neat for web/ graphics AND metals!
If you've been reading this blog at all or actually know me, you know I have my multi-armed Hindu goddess arms in many, many fires. Well, in my search for web background inspiration I cam across these two sites:
http://www.colourlovers.com/
and
http://wanokoto.net/japonizes/gallery
The first site, ColourLover, allows you to create your own patterns and colorize them and/or search through thousands of already created patterns. Whatever you create goes into the pattern database so it can be used by anyone else who comes across it or knows its precise name. And you can re-color it to whatever color scheme you like, then right click to save it to your computer. The same goes for the Japonizer but has a limited number of traditional patterns to choose from in the gallery. But here's the kicker. Not only is this great for all the web people out there, but metals people can use it to make patterns for PNP to etch their own custom patterned sheet! How cool is that?????
http://www.colourlovers.com/
and
http://wanokoto.net/japonizes/gallery
The first site, ColourLover, allows you to create your own patterns and colorize them and/or search through thousands of already created patterns. Whatever you create goes into the pattern database so it can be used by anyone else who comes across it or knows its precise name. And you can re-color it to whatever color scheme you like, then right click to save it to your computer. The same goes for the Japonizer but has a limited number of traditional patterns to choose from in the gallery. But here's the kicker. Not only is this great for all the web people out there, but metals people can use it to make patterns for PNP to etch their own custom patterned sheet! How cool is that?????
Thursday, June 30, 2011
AWOL
Sorry, it's been a bit hectic this month. On top of the day job, I'm taking a welding class, teaching 2 night classes and working on a website (one in earnest and several in the pipeline) and there's been some celebration of some kind (Father's Day, our wedding anniversary, etc.) almost every weekend and all of the above combined has banished my personal creative time to the far corners of the universe. And I was sick for a bit, too, which slowed me down. When it rains it pours :-)
Classes will be over at the end of July and so will the web project (keep your fingers crossed) and I'm taking some vacation days so I will plan on getting back to the blog et al soon. Hope your June has gone well and if you live where I do that you are staying cool!
Classes will be over at the end of July and so will the web project (keep your fingers crossed) and I'm taking some vacation days so I will plan on getting back to the blog et al soon. Hope your June has gone well and if you live where I do that you are staying cool!
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Crackle Enamel
My student Diana Pettiti studied for a number of years with an old-school group of enamelists in California before moving to Phoenix and she brought to the class some techniques I'd only read about and had never tried. Diana was so great about sharing what she knew and letting me photograph the process.
So, what is crackle enamel?
Here is how I understand it (and please feel free to correct me if I get any of this wrong): the crackle effect is produced using a base coat of enamel with a very low co-efficient of expansion (which means it flows/ moves readily sooner than other enamels would at the same temperature) with a finely powdered liquid enamel on top. Thompson Enamel makes a crackle base in clear, white and black. Diana used the Liquid Form Enamels as the top layer (NOT the Liquid Form Brushable Enamels- I don't know what the difference is but they are separate in the Thompson catalog).
You need to prepare your metal as usual for enameling: metal should be grease free and free of scale if using copper and if you want to make sure your enamel stays clean. Do your counter side completely- if you know you are going to have 2 coats on the front, go ahead and do 2 coats of counter now. Clean your front side then sift a nice even coat of the crackle base. Depending on how thickly you sift, you may need a second application. You don't want this layer to be super thin because you WANT it to MOVE.
Next, you need to mix the liquid enamel in a small open mouthed container like a Dixie cup or condiment take-out type cup. You mix with distilled water, no Klyr-Fire, around the consistency of tempera paint. The enamel should coat the mixing utensil in a thin opaque layer. You don't want it too watery or too thick. If it's too thick it may not split.
Your metal with the crackle base should be prepped and ready to go before you start mixing the liquid enamel so once the liquid enamel is ready, pick up the crackle base piece and hold it from the underside. You are going to pour the liquid form over the piece to coat the surface completely and you will need to be holding it so you can tilt it around to facilitate the coating process. Shake off any excess.
Once the piece is coated, set it on a trivet to dry, which will take quite a while because the entire top surface is saturated with water. You can place the piece on top of a hot kiln to speed things up or use a heat gun from underneath to dry the enamel quickly without reaching firing temp. I'm impatient so I like to do this a lot. Once you are absolutely sure all the water has evaporated, you can fire.
You are going to fire in a HOT kiln. For this process to work, the crackle base has to really move. You normally fire for about the same amount of time but really it just depends on when you see the cracking effect or not. This is a somewhat capricious technique and if the base layer isn't thick enough and the top layer not the right consistency, the kiln isn't hot enough, etc. it may not work. It will take some trial and error to really be able to get reliable results. But oh, what results!
The Liquid Form Enamels are opaques so what you see is what you get with their colors. They can also be mixed to make new colors and used in painting techniques where they produce a water-color like effect. One thing Diana did learn in my class is that if the crackle effect isn't as dramatic as you like, you can stick it back in the kiln and sometimes get a little more out of it. If it doesn't work at all, then 1 of the 3 aspects (kiln heat/ time, crackle base ratio, liquid enamel ratio) is off and if it's definitely not the kiln, then it's one of the other 2 and you just have to start over.
I do need to add the sample size used in this demo was a 2 inch domed disc. Diana says the crackle also needs gravity and area to help it move so the effects may be reduced on smaller or flat pieces. I tend to work on smaller, flatter pieces and I find that adding a little more water to the top layer mix helps in achieving a crackle effect when base coat thickness, piece size and gravity aren't there to help you.
:-)
So, what is crackle enamel?
Here is how I understand it (and please feel free to correct me if I get any of this wrong): the crackle effect is produced using a base coat of enamel with a very low co-efficient of expansion (which means it flows/ moves readily sooner than other enamels would at the same temperature) with a finely powdered liquid enamel on top. Thompson Enamel makes a crackle base in clear, white and black. Diana used the Liquid Form Enamels as the top layer (NOT the Liquid Form Brushable Enamels- I don't know what the difference is but they are separate in the Thompson catalog).
![]() |
Diana is using Clear Crackle Base for her project |
You need to prepare your metal as usual for enameling: metal should be grease free and free of scale if using copper and if you want to make sure your enamel stays clean. Do your counter side completely- if you know you are going to have 2 coats on the front, go ahead and do 2 coats of counter now. Clean your front side then sift a nice even coat of the crackle base. Depending on how thickly you sift, you may need a second application. You don't want this layer to be super thin because you WANT it to MOVE.
![]() |
Sifting the Crackle Base |
![]() |
Fired to maturity- The Crackle Base behaves just like any other transparent enamel on copper so fire it normally |
Next, you need to mix the liquid enamel in a small open mouthed container like a Dixie cup or condiment take-out type cup. You mix with distilled water, no Klyr-Fire, around the consistency of tempera paint. The enamel should coat the mixing utensil in a thin opaque layer. You don't want it too watery or too thick. If it's too thick it may not split.
![]() |
Buy Liquid Form Enamels in powder form so you can control the water content |
![]() |
Mixing the enamel- stir with a solid object to reduce bubles |
Your metal with the crackle base should be prepped and ready to go before you start mixing the liquid enamel so once the liquid enamel is ready, pick up the crackle base piece and hold it from the underside. You are going to pour the liquid form over the piece to coat the surface completely and you will need to be holding it so you can tilt it around to facilitate the coating process. Shake off any excess.
![]() |
The piece has been coated and now Diana is letting any excess drip back into the container. You can reuse the material if it dries out. Just add water and re-constitute. |
Once the piece is coated, set it on a trivet to dry, which will take quite a while because the entire top surface is saturated with water. You can place the piece on top of a hot kiln to speed things up or use a heat gun from underneath to dry the enamel quickly without reaching firing temp. I'm impatient so I like to do this a lot. Once you are absolutely sure all the water has evaporated, you can fire.
![]() |
The kiln needs to be hotter than normal- ~1600F |
You are going to fire in a HOT kiln. For this process to work, the crackle base has to really move. You normally fire for about the same amount of time but really it just depends on when you see the cracking effect or not. This is a somewhat capricious technique and if the base layer isn't thick enough and the top layer not the right consistency, the kiln isn't hot enough, etc. it may not work. It will take some trial and error to really be able to get reliable results. But oh, what results!
![]() |
Right out of the kiln and look at the glow on the metal |
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As with most reds, the liquid form enamel comes out of the kiln looking black |
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Starting to "color up" as I like to say |
The Liquid Form Enamels are opaques so what you see is what you get with their colors. They can also be mixed to make new colors and used in painting techniques where they produce a water-color like effect. One thing Diana did learn in my class is that if the crackle effect isn't as dramatic as you like, you can stick it back in the kiln and sometimes get a little more out of it. If it doesn't work at all, then 1 of the 3 aspects (kiln heat/ time, crackle base ratio, liquid enamel ratio) is off and if it's definitely not the kiln, then it's one of the other 2 and you just have to start over.
I do need to add the sample size used in this demo was a 2 inch domed disc. Diana says the crackle also needs gravity and area to help it move so the effects may be reduced on smaller or flat pieces. I tend to work on smaller, flatter pieces and I find that adding a little more water to the top layer mix helps in achieving a crackle effect when base coat thickness, piece size and gravity aren't there to help you.
:-)
Monday, May 23, 2011
I'm going to re-title my enamling class "Enamels R&D"
Enameling does involve science, but it's not math. It's more like chaos theory....
I don't have anything more to add, really. If you've ever done it, you know what I mean.
:-)
I don't have anything more to add, really. If you've ever done it, you know what I mean.
:-)
Friday, May 20, 2011
Student Work
I have had some wonderful students over the years and I wish I could say I chronicled all their work in my classes but I've only recently (in the last year) started taking photos of what they are/ were working on. So I'm going to share here (and continue to do so) some of the wonderful work they've created. I received some photos from the students themselves, which is always a great treat.
Three beautiful pieces and I can't remember whose they are! Please, let me know!
More to come!
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Bracelet by Linda Rhealt |
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Second bracelet by Linda Rhealt |
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Linda's work area |
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Enameled "flowers" in the garden by Al Streyfeller (Those are live ducks, by the way) |
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More enameled "flowers" in the garden by Al Streyfeller |
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This was some of the collection Dona Kahler made. She's an amazing stained glass artist (among many other achievements!) |
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Judith Lupnacca- wonderful person and open to the many surprises the glass might provide |
Three beautiful pieces and I can't remember whose they are! Please, let me know!
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Diana Pettiti |
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Another amazing piece from Diana. This was raku'd with white as a base. |
More to come!
Labels:
art classes,
Enameling,
Mesa Arts Center,
student work
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Computer Aided Design
I haven't talked much about the digital side of my life except to announce when I got a photo in a show but it's not for lack of plenty o digital stuff going on in my life. I am preparing a web design proposal and while looking for color schemes (I get ahead of myself frequently) for this client I stumbled upon this nifty little website/ app:
Color Scheme Designer
I highly recommend you check this out if you are a designer/ need ideas for color combination/ whatever. You can select a bunch of different color scheme options such as complementary, triad, analogous, etc. and you can preview a web layout with "Light Page Example" and "Dark Page Example" buttons in the lower right below the combination box at right. You can adjust the hue and tint, adjust for colorblindness and more. It's pretty awesome. Just FYI :-)
Color Scheme Designer
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Here's what it looks like |
Labels:
color design,
color theory,
graphic design,
web design
Monday, May 9, 2011
Flux
What is flux? For the metal smith, flux is an oxygen inhibitor. That's really it. When metal containing copper (which is sterling silver, alloyed gold and brass) is exposed to heat and air at the same time, it oxidizes and creates a scale layer that solder cannot attach to. Solder is also made up of silver, copper and zinc and so it also needs to be protected from oxygen while it is being heated. Flux goes onto the piece while it is clean and cool and forms a glassy barrier when melted which air cannot penetrate until it is finally burned away through extensive heat exposure (i.e. you've been heating the piece at high heat for a long time).
If you've done it right, the solder will melt and join the pieces of metal you want to join while the flux is still protecting the seam.
For years, metal smiths used fluxes containing potassium biflouride, a chemical that is fairly nasty to inhale but works great as an oxygen inhibitor. Many of us know this kind of flux by it's brand name "Handy Flux".
Years ago an alternative came out called "Dandix Flux", which didn't contain the potassium biflouride. Yeah. It sucked. Big time. It didn't hold for very long under heat, meaning the time one had to get something soldered before everything turned black and dirty was greatly reduce.
I tried it and ended up going back to the more chemically Handy Flux. Until, that is, Bob Coogan at the Appalachian Center for Craft turned me on to Superior #6 brazing flux. This stuff is just as good as the Handy Flux and it doesn't contain the potassium biflouride. I've used it for years and highly recommend it. You can order it by the case from the company directly or by the jar from H&N Electronics in California. That's not to say flux is completely safe, one still has to take sensible steps to minimize exposure, but at least we can cross one chemical off the list!
By the way, I was trained on paste flux so that is what I'm comfortable using. I know some jewelers use Battern's, which is a yellow liquid flux and some use a combination of powdered boric acid and denatured alcohol. I don't use those.
Battern's is really more for gold soldering in my experience- and I have no idea what is actually in it. And boric acid- well, if you accidentally ingest boric acid- there's no antidote and you can be poisoned as well from long term absorption through the skin (I've read the paste fluxes contain boric acid as well but it's already mixed in and not a powder to be mixed, which I think is somewhat safer).
There are more products on the market of course and some new ones say they are better and safer than the old paste flux. One new one is called Firescoff.
It's supposed to be very safe. Metal smith Polly Smith uses it in conjunction with paste flux and really likes it, especially with Argentium silver. I have some but haven't tried it. It's expensive so Polly suggests painting it on rather than spraying it as directed. I'll let you know if I like it when I finally getting around to trying it.
There's also something called Cupronil, which I also have a bottle of someone probably gave me and I've never tried it. I'll report on it as well if I ever try it!
It's important to note there are many fluxes out there. If you know of any other fluxes not mentioned here you really like or you have tried Firescoff or Cupronil and have some input- please leave a comment!
If you've done it right, the solder will melt and join the pieces of metal you want to join while the flux is still protecting the seam.
For years, metal smiths used fluxes containing potassium biflouride, a chemical that is fairly nasty to inhale but works great as an oxygen inhibitor. Many of us know this kind of flux by it's brand name "Handy Flux".
![]() |
The original paste flux I always used- still a great flux and still in use today |
Years ago an alternative came out called "Dandix Flux", which didn't contain the potassium biflouride. Yeah. It sucked. Big time. It didn't hold for very long under heat, meaning the time one had to get something soldered before everything turned black and dirty was greatly reduce.
![]() |
Booooo!!!!! |
I tried it and ended up going back to the more chemically Handy Flux. Until, that is, Bob Coogan at the Appalachian Center for Craft turned me on to Superior #6 brazing flux. This stuff is just as good as the Handy Flux and it doesn't contain the potassium biflouride. I've used it for years and highly recommend it. You can order it by the case from the company directly or by the jar from H&N Electronics in California. That's not to say flux is completely safe, one still has to take sensible steps to minimize exposure, but at least we can cross one chemical off the list!
![]() |
This is my somewhat dilapidated jar. I've had it for years and it's still half full. |
By the way, I was trained on paste flux so that is what I'm comfortable using. I know some jewelers use Battern's, which is a yellow liquid flux and some use a combination of powdered boric acid and denatured alcohol. I don't use those.
Battern's is really more for gold soldering in my experience- and I have no idea what is actually in it. And boric acid- well, if you accidentally ingest boric acid- there's no antidote and you can be poisoned as well from long term absorption through the skin (I've read the paste fluxes contain boric acid as well but it's already mixed in and not a powder to be mixed, which I think is somewhat safer).
There are more products on the market of course and some new ones say they are better and safer than the old paste flux. One new one is called Firescoff.
It's supposed to be very safe. Metal smith Polly Smith uses it in conjunction with paste flux and really likes it, especially with Argentium silver. I have some but haven't tried it. It's expensive so Polly suggests painting it on rather than spraying it as directed. I'll let you know if I like it when I finally getting around to trying it.
There's also something called Cupronil, which I also have a bottle of someone probably gave me and I've never tried it. I'll report on it as well if I ever try it!
![]() |
Cupronil Flux |
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