Friday, May 2, 2014

Northfield Riverwalk Market Summer 2013





Customer who posed for publicity photo





Jim all ready for the market to open


Wednesday, August 7, 2013

New Agua Nueva Cabochon


Large Agua Nueva cabochon fresh off of the grinder.  Beautiful pastels along with interesting moss agate along the left side.  This is really premo material from Mexico.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Vaquilla Agate

I have been working on some new Vaquilla agate pieces.  The pictures are not high quality and the polish is not what it will be, but this gives a good idea anyway.

This material is magical and has more colors than I have ever seen in Vaquilla agate.  I think this is really old stock stuff.


Monday, July 1, 2013

Carol made her first ring!!!!

The ring is made out of sterling silver and has a lapis cabochon set in it.  The ring has been antiqued to give it an older patina.  Carol, of course, is not fully happy with the piece and everybody else thinks is is stunning.  The creator sees every bend and seeming imperfection though....






Monday, June 17, 2013

Latest Sale!!

Latest Sale!!


Orthoceras extinct nautiloid cephalopod; also known as Orthoceratites. The fossils can be found in all over the world. This specimen was picked up at this years Tucson Gem and Mineral Show and originated in Madagascar.

Orthoceras was an ancient sea animal that lived more than 400 million years ago. The name means straight horn, referring to the characteristic long, straight, conical shell. The preserved shell is all that remains of this ancestor of our modern-day squid.
All the living relatives of these nautiloid, squid, octopus, cuttlefish, and nautilus are predators, and we can assume that Orthoceras was also a hunter of the Paleozoic seas, possibly having trilobites for breakfast!
-http://www.fossils-facts-and-finds.com/orthoceras.html

18 inch obsidian and silver pewter beaded necklace with 2 inch extender. Hand made sterling silver hook

*** To see the rest of our Necklace collection go to: https://www.etsy.com/shop/PocketRockDesigns?section_id=10001063

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Vaquilla Moss Agate

I have threatened to do a before and after with a rock slab turned cabochon for eons now.  Well guess what, here it is:

Back in February, I bought a slice of Vaquilla Moss Agate from an EBay seller from Montana.  Looking through his two pages of items I saw a lot of rare and/or old stock rock.  I was lucky enough to win the bidding.  Here is a link to esciguy:

http://www.ebay.com/sch/esciguy/m.html?item=170974462803&pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item27cedf4353&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2562

Anyway...back to the Vaquilla Moss Agate.  Here is a photo of the cut slab>
 
 
Here is the finished cabochon from the same area of slab.....


This cab measures 45mm x 39mm (widest) x 6mm and took a high shine in Rapid 61 polish.
 


Thursday, May 30, 2013

Green Moss Agate

Sometimes it is difficult to think of new topics.  I guess I'll just start with what is going on.  We have a batch of Lake Superior agates in the Lot O Tumbler.  The agates are medium size.  I had them in 600 grit and then saw there were still many pits, so I backed it off to 200 grit and will work on having more patience.  "Patience is a virtue worth cultivating" as my Grandmother always said.

We also started posting on Tumblr.....http://pocketrockdesigns.tumblr.com/

This is a picture from February.  Green Moss Agate from India.  Some of this material has lavender chalcedony that is stunning.  I don't know why, but I have always been drawn to moss agate-it soothes me somehow.  The crystal people say that moss agate is healing for the circulatory system and as a diabetic that makes sense to me....

We also have eight freeform lapis cabochons on our Etsy site.  Check them out at https://www.etsy.com/shop/PocketRockDesigns?section_id=13673709



Quote from John McPhee

“With their four-dimensional minds, and in their interdisciplinary ultra verbal way, geologists can wiggle out of almost anything.”
-John McPhee

Saturday, May 25, 2013

The newest creation is variscite

The newest creation is variscite.

 
This variscite comes from Lucin, Utah.  Lucin is located in the northwest panhandle corner of Utah.  Originally a railroad town, the Southern Pacific abandoned the line in 1936.  Old-time railroaders settled into the town with their children.  Sadly now, the buildings are all gone and all is left is two concrete phone booths and some fruit cellars.
 
Lucin is a favorite for rock hounds in search of relatively rare green treasure.  Variscite is associated with phosphate deposits.  When grinding this piece, I had to grind off the white phosphate-rich matrix to determine creative direction.  This piece is a relatively monotone green.  Other pieces have contained an interplay of the above color with a darker Kelly green and/or a spider web pattern.
 
Back to Lucin......  There is a famous landscape art piece called the sun tunnels there.  It was created by a female artist in the 1970's and sadly, I forgot her name.....  Oh yeah and a concrete phone booth for the halibut....
 
 
 


 


 

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Sampling of our newest stuff



A sampling of some of our newest stuff.  The first picture is Lapis Lazuli from Afghanistan.  This piece has a wide band of quartz running through it.  Most of the others were bluer and more pristine, but we like the organic feel of this piece.  Lapis is 5.5 to 6 on the Mohs hardness scale.  I found better results working this through on diamond than tumble polishing.  It appeared that the golden flecks of pyrite wanted to undercut in the tumbler.

The next two belt buckles are new ventures for us and we are pleased as punch at how they turned out.  The first buckle has a 40x30mm African Tiger Eye cabochon and Carol did a good job of capturing the wink or chatoyancy of the stone.  The second buckle has a 40x30mm malachite cabochon.  This material is from Zaire and has a touch of chatoyancy.

I have ground a few kambaba jasper cabs, dinosaur bone cabs, and my favorite-Botswana agate cabs and have put them in 600 grit to tumble polish.  I am trying to same some wear and tear of my finer diamond wheels, so for the harder jaspers and agate material, I am grinding to my satisfaction and then tumble finishing.  If I see pits, scratches, wheel marks, etc., I can grind them off before returning to the next stage.


Wednesday, April 10, 2013

As the Minnesota tundra thaws......

As the Minnesota tundra thaws, I find myself very impatient for warmer days to get out into the garage to saw rock.  Carol and I have picked up some rough lapis lazuli

April 10 and Minnesota is getting hit by the super snowstorm.....

April 10 and Minnesota is getting hit by the super snowstorm that is hitting the Midwest.  I feel bad for the robins that are here.  They look so cold bouncing around on the snow , all puffed up.... 

I need to change out 240 and 600 grit diamond wheels on the Cab King.  I have been putting it off.  The tumbler has rainbow moonstone at 600 grit.  Otherwise not much is new.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

As the Minnesota tundra thaws.......

As the Minnesota tundra thaws, I find myself very impatient for warmer days to get out into the garage to saw rock.  Carol and I have picked up some rough lapis lazuli and oco geodes that just invite sawing.  I need to clean out our 10" highland park saw, as the oil is very dirty and sludgy.  That means using the tile saw after I put on a new 6" thin diamond blade designed for cutting agates.  I was advised to "take it slow and use LOTS of water".

In the meantime, I have been tumbling a batch of rainbow moonstone for several days in 200 grit.  They are starting to look nice and I can stare for hours at the little rainbow flashes as pieces hit the light as they tumble.  In case you as the reader haven't picked up on it, working with rock is a very meditative and mystical thing for me (Jim).  I can be totally focused for hours and before I know it 5 hours can have gone by. 

Here is a representative piece from a google image search of the kind of material in the tumbler.

  As always, I can't say enough about the Belt Inc. Lot O' Tumbler.  The results are fast using vibratory motion and the polishes are beyond compare.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Newest cabochon of fossilized dinosaur bone from Utah

Newest cabochon of fossilized dinosaur bone from Utah.  You can clearly see where minerals replaced the cells.  Most of this material is found in the Utah/Colorado area.  When the dinosaurs died, the bodies would be carried downstream and formed a dinosaur "log jam"-where the bodies were quickly covered with river silt.  I think Carol mentioned 20 million years ago for those events.  The Colorado/Utah area was a swamp at that time with many river systems running through it, not the dry and dusty land it is today.

Another new addition is a black obsidian cabochon with one snowflake in the corner.  I kept on getting my mug in the picture because of a high shine.  First world problem there....

Thursday, February 21, 2013

....batch of 65 new cabochons

Time flies and no blogging has occurred.  Carol and I went through a rock lull period.  Oh the collecting never stopped (some would say hoarding) and Carol did a few custom orders and I did a few cabs, but not in the quantities we used to do.  It seems like the lull has been good for defining ourselves and what Pocket Rock Designs is about.  We decided that it is all about being eclectic and no one rock or piece of jewelry is ever the same as another.  It helps to have a vision.  Etsy sales have been good.

As for me, I have a hard time doing calibrated ovals all the time and find that the natural cracks and contours of the rock usually lead to the final free form shape.  We have branched off to include some new materials, including blue apatite crystals, rainbow moonstone, and 1 1/2 pounds of lapis lazuli.  The Lapis is gorgeous and I will post a before and after pic as soon as possible.  Expect to see some banded, agatized, fossilized dinosaur crap on here too.  I hope to be blogging every other day for now.  Besides reaching out, I think it is a great way to chronicle our journey.


Cab King cabochon machine with 6" diamond wheels!  Oh the Joy and Rapture! MEOW!
Carol has stocked up on beads, metal, a Foredom flex shaft, and items needed to make rings.  She is so creative and I can hardly wait until she gets some time to bezel, solder, and have a great time.  Last fall we invested in a Cab King for grinding and polishing.  Now that I seem to have finessed the finer points of operation, I have just completed a batch of 65 new cabochons which we will be posting to Etsy soon.  Having good equipment really makes the difference in quality.  Expect Operation "Stock up for the Northfield Artist's Walk Shows" to ramp up shortly.  I will try to get some photos on the blog, so stop in frequently.

What's in the Lot O' Tumbler now?
Lake Superior Agates 1 to 2"
Tiger Eye preforms
One fantastic piece of Binghamite
Snow Flake and Black Obsidian just to see how it goes

Here is a representative picture of some of the Lapis we bought: