The Dino War Machine Edges Towards Completion.

by hansmeevis on November 13, 2009


Watch out! It is coming.
I finished the articulated tail today and put on the plasma transmission and receiving unit at the tip.
This is what in human terms could be called a transmitter.transciever,as has been pointed out–Something that transmits and receives.

The receiving unit is a copper based dish with a phosphor bronze receptor.
This allows for real time transmission between the guns and head.
It is also able to fire or project (if that is a correct word ) a disruptor beam, a matter collapser, that can, at it’s highest setting, kill planets.

Both move in syncro and are independent as to firing sequence. At least, they will be when I have finished building this machine.
Also, as the builder, I must apologise to my principals.
These pictures were taken under extreme conditions and are of questionable quality.
Further reports will include highly detailed pictures that will hopefully satisfy your highness’ exacting parameters.

Rear firing is not a problem for this machine.
It will be, when completed, be able to fire from a 360 degree attitude, that is, from the ground to the air.
Able to penetrate solid rock, the vacuum of space and the plasma of the sun, this weapon will assure the continued survival of the human race.

This would be the incoming alien aircraft firing position.
The receptor dish at the tip of the tail is able to receive incoming information and is also able to produce a discharge of some 35 Tetra volts towards the enemy.
And I wish all of you to know, the enemy are many.
From within, on the outside, human and alien, they are there, waiting.
And, while I do not want to raise division within our ranks, it has become apparent to our main cloud computers, that the first enemy might be our own politicians.
Believe it or not!
This bears more discussion in the future.

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An Opal Pendant and the Dino War Machine

by hansmeevis on November 10, 2009


Here is a nice pendant I made today. I have done more opal work than normal lately.
I have also been making a lot of schlock jewellery, and I am not going to post it here.
No ways I put front street stuff on my blog and have the whole world laugh at me.

The Dino War Machine, however, continues.
Gatling guns and some ribs and a throat spike are the latest additions.
The guns are not complete, there will still be some spikes added underneath. They also have to be cleaned up, like solder removed and fine sanding and polishing to be done.
Also the head is still in it’s infancy.
Man, it still needs a lot of work.
But the tail is next.
This is something I have figured out how to make so that it will be able to be moved in any position, but it is going to need some serious elbow grease to get there.
The trick at this stage is to get everything in proportion. Even though the head is still a little bit big, I know that it will be filed down later, so that is not a problem.
I think the claws are to small at this stage, but I can add some more body to them later.
The tail will add some more weight to the back, allowing the machine to stand in a more Tyrannosaurus Rex posture.
Right now it stands like some dumb chicken at a KFC cheerleader party.
Still, you wouldn’t want to meet this dude in a dark alley at night in the bad side of Las Vegas, now would you?
Really, so you know about those alleys?
The guns are made with cartridge brass bought at my local Ace store as brass rods and then rolled down to flat bar and bent round and soldered.
Then it is filed out to a six sided ‘revolver’ shape.
The barrels are copper and brass wire that I drew down.
Then I make the top and bottom in a ‘cartridge’ form.
The arms can move in any direction and they are held in place with the grooved rod in the middle and the collars with a grub screw.

The guns are attached in this manner. It is all still basic. The flanges and screws are still to be carved and filed.
Lot’s of detail still to be added.

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Here is a nice bangle I made on commission for a lady from Scotland. Set with a Nigerian blue tourmaline that I cut last year. She also bought the blue tourmaline that I posted on in my last post, so they go nicely together.

We don’t get many Scottish people on the island, mostly Americans.
Just got to love that accent. Of all the accents in English, to me Scottish is the nicest.
This is a chased/repouse and fused gold brooch set with a very nice Opal of some 8 carats.
Don’t laugh! I have seen a resurgence of peace signs in the last year.
This has got to be the first fused one I have made ever, though.
I think it’s cool though.

Last night we went to an art exhibition on the french side of the island.
Pretty or what! I love this blurred photo of Anne bringing me some plonk.
A piece by my buddy Doug Hazelton. It has also got a gigantic shower head in it.

This was cool. Made out of steel, it’s got a post nuclear Matrix feel to it.
Weighs about 300 kilo’s and the base is carved marble.
A snip at 44000 euro.
By the same artist. Also steam punkish. 14000 EU only
And the Dino War Machine continues.
I know the head looks to big, but the body is still going to have all kinds of stuff added to it.
Mean looking, not? The head swivels. I’ll start the tail next week, I think.

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A Rose, a Ring and the Dino War Machine

by hansmeevis on November 2, 2009

Here is a commisioned gold Rose pendant set with a Rhodolite garnet. The leaves are 18ct white gold.
This flower is made from an instructive video that is available here and was made by an excellent metalsmith Luis. F. Moreno. Check the benchtube videos out.
They are a wonderment.
This is an 18ct ring set with a blue tourmaline and two diamonds.
With an African flavour.

The Dino War Machine continues with breathtaking pace. This is my latest Steam punk project.
Don’t kid yourself, it might be looking like a headless chicken right now, but just wait.
This is only the chassis.
Check those evil feet out.
The red stuff is just the iron plating out on the brass when it is quenched in an acid solution after soldering. I can get rid of it by adding hydrogen peroxide to my acid, which consists of sodium-bi sulfate but it makes the brass all crishy and I don’t like that.
It is a mission to polish then and I will remove this at a later stage of manufacture mechanically.
All the guns and plasma cannons and phase disrupting devices will be added after the head and tail are manufactured.
The sides are going to have glass port holes and the inside will have lights inside.
The back is going to have energy conducting spines.
And a phased array of syncro conducing replicators.
These are the power generators of this machine, once it is finished being crafted by my hands and I declare it fully born and released to this world.
It goes without saying that it will protect the world from death and destruction.
Coming to a computer near you soon.

This was how the baby started to be born.

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Of Sunsets, Signs and Cockroaches

by hansmeevis on October 30, 2009

Sunset from the top of my shop building.
Nice one.
I have to fix a few thing around the shop.
And I am not talking about jewellery.
My sign was one. It was dying and looking tatty.
Taken off, and a major grill (shiver) mission, believe me…..
Rotten wood and all.

I had made it out of resin and plastic and wood.
And so here I am re-resin-ing and re painting the letters.
In fact, I have been doing this for a good while.
I figured it would only last about two years in this hostile environment here at the coast.
So I got 4 and a half years out of it. Not bad.
But the wood is all rotten and soft, so it was a real nausea to take off.
I hate the feel of rotten wood. like a hard shell on the outside and soft inside.
It’s like if you walking in the woods and you stand on a log and your foot goes right through it .
And you foot hits mush, and all creepies crawl out.
Cockroaches and earwigs.

Believe me, I have kept spiders and scorpions and snakes for pets all my life.
Ok, maybe not snakes anymore, because Anne is shit scared of them.
But for me to catch and pickup a snake is no problem. Or a scorpion, or a spider.

But cockroaches just do me in.

I hate the ’snap’ sound they make when you stand on them.
So I don’t anymore.
There is not one fracking cockroach in my workshop.
I layed down a Napalm Radioactive Layer of poison down when I moved in and that solved all problems.
But we still get these big 3 inch ones that fly in at night.
They actually outside ones but if they inside, they’ll park off no problem.
They always solitary, and they real eeeuuw stuff.
I put a disposable cup over them and then and then I slide a sheet of paper under the cup.
Then I rain a death rain of poison on them from a spray can.
And I throw all of it in the rubbish bin.
Then I wash my hands. Twice.

I read somewhere that banana peals drive cockroaches away.
I think it was in one of those house hold tips in a house-wife’s-corner in the local newspaper.
I can just imagine a house full of banana peels.

You’ll need rugby boots to walk down the passage.
All the cockroaches are gone but every fruit fly in the neighbourhood is having a party.
Something to do with the gas that rotting fruit releases.
The gas attracts fruit flies, I believe.
And fruit flies just love rotting bananas, because there is that saying from my friend James Clark that goes:
“Time flies like an arrow, but fruit flies like a banana”.
I mean, fruit flies are far better than cockroaches but they can still piss me off because they get into my wine glass.
What do you do when you see two fruit flies in your wine?
Obviously pissed?
Do you dip your finger in and scoop them out and drink the wine? When no-one’s looking.
Or do you throw the wine away, and pour a new glass?
And if it is expensive wine?
Or your last glass of wine on a Sunday night?

Reminds me of a story, all this insect stuff

We were sitting in Monte-Mart tea shop in Kudu Arcade in Pretoria in the late seventies.

One of the hotties, called Laetitia, ordered a salad and when all the food arrived at our table, everyone tucked in.
Halfway through, Laetitia SHRIEKS at the top of her voice.
She was a dramatic chick.
Anyway, there in her salad, is half a cockroach.
The front half.
And the legs are still waving around.

Begging forgiveness.

So Rob, the owner, hears this commotion and he comes to the front.
Tries to calm Laetitia.
“Look!” she shrieks, “It’s still alive!”
“Well” Rob says, “at least you know it’s fresh”

We fell about laughing, but Laetitia was not amused at all, I’m afraid.

Sigh– women can be so hard to please sometimes……

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The Time Tower is Finished

by hansmeevis on October 27, 2009

Finished. Whew. That took a while.
With this piece I religiously recorded the hours I spent working on it.
A total of 203 hours of work.
It stands 300mm high by 330mm long by 180mm wide.
The wood base, which is Southern African Cherry wood, was finished yesterday and fitted into the copper and brass frame.
The brass legs and the top and bottom edifices were made here
The whole time tower consists of 354 individually made components.
Other than the bulbs, clock inserts, handle on the top and the rheostat, everything is handmade.
I started the basic frame in May this year.
Rear view.
The electrical cable will be replaced after I have finished making the display cabinets for this piece and my Gear Gun.
That is a big mission in itself.
I ordered ‘U’ channeling from K&S Engineering in the USA and of course I had to buy dealers quantities so I have got enough for my lifetime and yours….
Side View.

Pierced and blued titanium and brass background .
The titanium in the front and the brass are pierced out in a style I call the exaggerated curve.
It is something I have drawn since I was a child.

The sides of the tower with pierced brass and a copper background.
All the screws and bolts were hand made.
A close up of the junction box, where the cabling divides.
The top of one of the light towers, with pierced out brass plate that was domed and a copper sheet with a glass inlay
View from the top, showing the focusing lens.
The gear doors closed.
And the gear doors open.
The black handle on the top is connected to a dimmer switch that also functions as the on/off switch.
This is the door latch that stops the doors from opening.
The gears were cast here
Detail of the time smoothing device above the main clock face.
One of the corner edifices that hold time down and keep it in it’s place.
They were wax carved, cast, then vulcanized and injected and cast again.
There are two tube guides. They were hand made out of copper and brass.
A couple of posts ago, I was asked how I achieved this texture.
Done with a 1.5mm ball frazer and a hanging motor. And an evenings sweat.
This was an enjoyable project, done in the Steam punk art genré.
I like this art form.
It allows me to use my goldsmithing skills in metals that don’t break the bank.
It allows me to move into areas that I am not confident in.
This is a good thing for any metal smith, I think.
This project caused me to make many things three and on occasion even four times over before I was happy.
And because everything is bigger than jewellery, the re-work was more significant, and therefore the angst factor in relation to the cheapness of the metal was quite high.
I thought it would not be the case, but when you about to frack a section up that costs $10 in metal but took 20 hours to make, you sweat, believe me.
My next project ,as soon as I recieve my brass sectioning, is going to be making some fancy doo-da display cases.

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Making A Fold-Over Catch

by hansmeevis on August 28, 2009

These catches are available commercially, but that does not mean there is never a need to have to make one. They are one of the strongest and most reliable catches that can be made in an hour or so. I use these when I make a watch strap, for chains and bracelets. In fact, I have one on my day to day watch and it has not once in four years let loose. The example below is made out of 14kt gold.

I start with a piece of plate about 0.7mm thick. This one is for a narrow chain. If the chain were heavier, I would make it more broad and then out of 1mm plate.

Then I pierce it out like this. The bottom section is going to be used for the top of the catch. Wait, you will see…


Here I have cut the bottom section off and stamped and trimmed it and filed two grooves in it. This is to give a clean neat bend when the arms get bent up and soldered.


I have soldered the two arms and also bent the front up.


These are filed straight and trimmed and the tops are rounded off.


This is the part that I cut off in the beginning. I file a groove at the end.


I solder a piece of wire in the groove. I use solid wire because I drill it afterwards, but tubing could also just as easily be used. Also I trimmed the arms and drilled then with a 1mm drill.

Here the wire is drilled and the top will be bent round.
Like this. I burr a small depression in the front where a small little ball will be soldered on. This is to allow one to use your nail to open the catch.
Here the ball has been soldered and the top been riveted. I like the riveted look but, of course, they could just as easily be soldered flush.
The catch is in place in the chain.

This is one for a titanium watch I made.
And here is another version for a Lavulite chain I made.

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Making Little Silver Boxes

by hansmeevis on August 25, 2009

I like little boxes.

I used to collect little boxes when I has young.
So now I make then from time to time.
I bought this wax working apparatus from a dental tech buddy of mine.
Very cool, with an adjustable pen, a collection of different tip that I have made, all clean and neat.
This is a picture of a box heavily sprued up.
I rather over sprue when I cast silver, it being cheap in relation to gold.
I first sprue up and then I decorate the sides.

Finished, blackened slightly with Liver of Sulphur.
A dime for size comparison.
The back. I cast the hinges in place. Easy peasy that way.
Cute, in’it?
This one that has compartments in it so you don’t mix up your headache tablets with your ecstasy ones…just kidding, just kidding.

This one I have blogged before, but I thought it appropriate to add.
I wax the stained glass and cast the silver around it.
Needless to say, my success ratio is not very high.
Mostly the glass cracks when the silver cools, but sometimes it works, like this one.
Cool, not?

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Folding Cross and Making the Proof of Concept.

by hansmeevis on August 21, 2009


This is the first cross I made. I filed the pieces 45 degrees, quick and dirty.


Which DID fold up like this–but very fugly.


I made several types of hinges to see which one was best.

.
Remember, all this stuff is taken on the fly and is also unfinished, so it looks kak.
So I developed the cross further.
Problem was, for it to fold up nicely it had to be broadened on the center ‘post’. (Is that the right word?)

Anyway, so it folded up into this box affair. About 15mm by 15mm.

This is the top open. But I didn’t like the shape of the cross. It looks clunky.


So I cut 12mm square pieces of silver and glued them onto a dop and proceeded to cut them on my Imahashi.— Imahashi = milling machine
This did not work as smoothly as I thought it would.
Reason was, I use epoxy to dop my stones but because silver conducts heat extremely well , so it heats up super quick.
So no matter how much water you use on the diamond lap, the fracking thing heats up and “poef” –off it is.
Because heat makes the epoxy release.


No matter. All I did, (after a nights sleep figuring out what to do, admittedly), was to solder the thing onto my dop with silver solder.


12mm squares that have a 45º bevel . Exactly.


Okay, so this is the completed box. Unfinished off, but the basic stuff completed.
It is 14mm square.

That pin pulls out to open it. It is one of those pins that doesn’t pull out all the way.

Then the bottom folds out.

And the arms fold out.
The gold one will have stones set in the flat part of the pyramids.
And on the outside of the box.
The unfolded size is 50mm x 35mm, excluding the V-link.

When the arms are folded in they are held in place with those two little lugs.

Like that.
The gold one will have the V-link hinged.
I’m not going to do it on this one because I’m gatvol on working on this thing.But now that the proof of concept is finished I can make one in gold. Then the gold one will have stones set on the outside, and different coloured stones set on the inside. Also the folded up shape is going to be more half round, so that it is not as stark as this one. Also much easier on the cleavage, it you get my drift…..

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Of Balls, Rings, Sounds and Optical Illusions.

by hansmeevis on August 8, 2009


I carved this ring out of Ferris purple wax.
Sometimes, when the ‘master pattern’ is complicated, I make a silicone mould out of the wax.
Just in case I screw the cast up. Which happens more that I would like to admit to my mummy.
But this one was biff- bam, thank you ma’am.
OK, not really, but it was not really difficult to carve, so I took a chance and cast it straight into gold. Hans kans ( chance, in Afrikaans ) they call me.

Came out nice.
This is my best gold ball laminated stone I have cut and made, set in a one-off ring.
I really like this type of work because it is on the edge and you not finding it in Walmart or Joe Pogenpoel Jewellers in Lynnwood Road in Pretoria. ( I swear, that’s a real name)
The ring has movement because of the ball, but it also has sound.
It you shake the ring the little ball makes a clicking sound.
How cool is that? Did I ever think of that?


This one also makes a sound.
This one was far more difficult to make.

Firstly, I made a white gold cup that I polished to resemble a reflector. ( the bottom part)
Like one of those solar reflectors that they heat water with in the Californian dessert.
Like that.
Then I set the stone with a thin band of gold so that the entire pavilion was still exposed.
Right in the focus where the water is boiled.

And then, because the pavilion still shows the ball from the bottom, it is reflected up past the stone, looking like dozens little trembling gold balls around the center trembling four balls, which are/is only one ball.
Bang! Done.
A ring that has gold, movement, sound and an optical illusion.
Beat that, junior. (G)

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