Casting

CASTING COURTESY OF THE BEACH by Amelia Gilmore

Experiments with sand and cuttlefish casting

Shells collected from the beach to be used for sand casting. 

This process involves pressing an object into a container of firmly packed sand to create a good likeness. Silver is heated in a crucible and the molten metal is poured into the space left by the object, acquiring it's shape and detail.

Can you Hear the Sea necklace

In this case a shell and tiny silver flower were cast in sand.

A funny little plastic crab I found in my old jewellery box. Cast in sand to create shiny silver cufflinks.

Crabby cufflinks

Conifer cufflinks

For these cufflinks I used a different method of casting- cuttlefish. Sounds odd but after collecting a few cuttlefish washed up on the beach I cut them in half and pressed an interesting button into the chalky surface. After fixing the two sides together and creating a channel for the liquid metal to enter, I cast the button in silver. The difference however with cuttlefish is that you can get a fascinating texture on the metal from the bones of the fish. The above surface of the cufflinks is actually the back of the cast buttons. I preferred the wonderful tree-like pattern left from the cuttlefish after the casting process. 

The back of the cufflinks which are the front of the original button I cast.