"I am enough" Braille Shiny Copper Cuff Bracelet Item ID: 2676652870
$60This is your own listing item.
I will be away from my shop Wed. June 10 through Sun. June 21. Purchases made during that time will ship no later than Monday June 22. Sorry for the inconvenience! But please do keep reading.....
Though beautiful on it's own, this shiny antiqued fold-formed copper cuff bracelet goes a step above by adding a unique touch of inspiration in the form of the message, "I am enough", in tactile contracted Braille (Grade 2 Braille). A wonderful gift, especially for a blind or visually impaired person. Make a statement with this wearable art.
What does "I am enough" mean? For me, it means you are valuable and worthy just as you are and that you do not need to prove your worth to anyone else.
Color: Raw copper antiqued with a dark patina, then burnished and polished, resulting in rich dark gray/black with coppery highlights.
Size: Medium. Should fit wrist 6.25" - 6.75" in circumference. It also loosely fits on my 6" wrist, measurement taken between the wrist bone and hand. Refer to sixth photo for measurements/size.
Length: 6-1/8 inches tip-to-tip before I formed it into the cuff shape. Width: Appx 1-1/2 inches
The cuff opening on the back is 1-3/16 inch. That's the part that slides over the lower arm before positioning onto the wrist.
Lightweight - weighing a bit more than one ounce.
Adjustable: You may ever so gently bend the bracelet for a more comfortable fit. But, over-bending may break it, so be careful.
The copper strip with Braille is tube-riveted onto the bracelet.
Front and back surfaces coated with sealant to retard tarnish and protect skin
Lovingly handcrafted and signed on the back by me, SWalle.
I hand-embossed the Braille using a Perkins Model 2 E-Z Read Slate and Stylus. The E-Z Read Slate creates Braille with dots that are spaced a tiny bit farther apart than Standard Braille, making it easier to read (especially on jewelry).
Props in photos not included.
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Questions? Contact me. Be sure to read my Maker's Policies including Return Policy and other FAQ's.
Thank you for supporting an independent artist. Imagine love, be kind, and take care.
- 6 oz
- 6-1/8 inches long before forming, 1-1/2 inches wide
- Copper is folded and unfolded multiple times; hot forged and cold formed; hammered and textured; antiqued with a dark patina
- sanded to bring out copper highlights
- and burnished to a high gloss. Braille is embossed by hand using a slate template and stylus. This separate piece is riveted onto the bracelet.
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View moreMeet the maker
Turner, Oregon
Hello! I'm Shirley. Welcome to my Wild Gatherings. I appreciate you being ... about
wildgatherings extraordinary adornments for you and your home
Wildswalle Turner, Oregon | I am an artist & crafter in the Pacific Northwest who loves making copper & silver décor & jewelry.
Hello! I'm Shirley. Welcome to my Wild Gatherings. I appreciate you being here! I create functional and decorative metal art & jewelry, using mostly old-school techniques. I specialize in kiln- and torch-fired vitreous enamel on copper & silver. Gemstones are a passion for me, as is re-purposing metals into items for decor or dress. I value integrity. My motto - be curious and ask questions.
My first soldering experience was for a school project at age 13 - a very intricate miniature three-wheeled surrey with moving wheels, a steering rod, and twisted-wire fringe on top. My dad, Willard, was very supportive of my "playing" in the garage. He would set me up with a soldering gun, a lathe, a saw, hammer and nails, or whatever I needed. I learned at an early age, by example, that I could do anything. If I didn't quite know how, I would figure it out.
WILD GATHERINGS ~ How Wild Gatherings came about: In 1993 I was preparing to engage in my very first craft booth at the local year-round Public Market in Salem, Oregon. I was creating lists of items that I could make to sell. On one of the lists were objects I could collect in the wild such as seeds, sage, wildflower bouquets, etc. At the top of this particular list I entered the title, "Wild Gatherings". The name stuck and became all-encompassing for the many aspects of my craft. For the next ten years or so, I maintained an art & craft booth and participated in local Saturday Markets as well as art and craft shows in the Pacific Northwest and Southern-to-Northern California ~ offering a myriad of handmade creations: kaleidoscopes (copper or stained glass), obsidian needle chimes (I dug the obsidian needles myself at Davis Creek, CA), perfumes and soaps, copper olive oil lamps, geode aromatherapy diffusers, bud vases made out of old silverware, handmade cone incense [yes, I formed each cone, one at a time, by hand], beeswax & soy wax candles, and many other articrafts. My Wild Gatherings booth won the "Most Excellent Merchant's Display Of The Faire" at the 1997 Valhalla Renaissance Festival at Lake Tahoe. I was proud to be featured in local newspapers, as well.
I've been fascinated by copper and it's many uses. Back in the '80's my stepmom gifted me a small copper-enameling kiln along with some copper blanks and a few samplings of enamels. I kept it all, just in case I might want to do something with it some day.
Fast forward to 2014. I offered myself the choice to either part with my stash, or build a space where I could once again be creative with the materials that I had hoarded for so long. Thus, I built my atelier ~ complete with hot & cold running water, two skylights, a vaulted ceiling, and a crystal chandelier.
FORMAL TRAINING: I was an art major in school. For two years in the early nineties I trained with an old master Silversmith in the art of sterling silver lost wax casting and sterling fabrication. Through experimentation, detail observation, reading, successes, and many ah-hah! moments, I am primarily self taught with more than a half-century of experience.
FOR THE BLIND and/or VISUALLY IMPAIRED: For fourteen years I was a computer graphic artist, creating tactile graphics for higher education math textbooks for college students who are blind. I have read, cover to cover, dozens of calculus, algebra, physics, chemistry, and statistics textbooks, and created - on a computer - a tactile representation of every diagram in each book, complete with braille labels. The diagrams were embossed on a special braille printer and inserted into a [huge] braille rendition of the textbook. I incorporate Braille into some of my jewelry. The term "I am enough" is particularly appropriate.
I compose my work from raw, reclaimed, or recycled copper; .999 fine silver; .935 Argentium Silver; .925 Sterling Silver; sterling findings; vitreous lead-free enamel powders and frit; and various re-claimed metals and materials. Enameled pieces are either torch or kiln-fired. I love wild things like lichen, moss, rough tree bark, insects, and flowing streams. I aspire for these textural elements to be reflected in my ever-evolving Wild Gatherings. Thank you for supporting an independent artist, and for taking the time to learn what "handmade" truly means. Shop small. Support independent artists and businesses. Be kind, take care, and fare well.
My mantra - think kind thoughts, and watch your words - they become your destiny.
Shirley Walle ~ Torchsmith • Enamelist • Arcadian • Wonderer
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