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Post by Drummond Island Rocks on Feb 22, 2014 22:10:23 GMT -5
I was ordering more wine stopper hardware last month and the place I get my stuff from is a dealer that sells to people working with stained glass and fused glass. There are a bunch of items that cross over very well for rocks too so I asked the owner what some of his better selling items were for glass and he mentioned these letter openers that people were epoxying fused glass to so I figured why not try a half a dozen with some rocks Michigan rocks on them to see if they get any reaction at local shows. All of these are rocks we hounded right near our cabin. My wife already claimed this one! Thanks for looking, Chuck
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Post by roy on Feb 22, 2014 22:15:50 GMT -5
nice work as always Chuck
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Post by pghram on Feb 22, 2014 23:05:50 GMT -5
Very nice, I'm always impressed by your ability to get several cabs exactly the same shape & size. I especially like the brown ones.
Rich
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Post by Jugglerguy on Feb 22, 2014 23:22:13 GMT -5
Those look good, Chuck. Your wife has good taste. The gowganda tillite looks good too.
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Post by Drummond Island Rocks on Feb 22, 2014 23:50:22 GMT -5
Those look good, Chuck. Your wife has good taste. The gowganda tillite looks good too. Thanks Rob. I have not found a good use for gowganda tillite yet. I did a google image search and there's no jewelry being made from it unless people are just calling it something different. I should have done one in Kona Dolomite but I forgot. Chuck
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Post by Jugglerguy on Feb 23, 2014 13:23:00 GMT -5
I've seen it called "dark pudding stone".
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Post by kap on Feb 23, 2014 14:06:21 GMT -5
NICE!
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kaldorlon
spending too much on rocks
Member since October 2013
Posts: 413
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Post by kaldorlon on Feb 23, 2014 15:40:45 GMT -5
Very nice!
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Post by rockjunquie on Feb 23, 2014 17:20:10 GMT -5
You've really nailed down that cut! I love that stuff- the what? dark pudding stone? Really cool. I think it's neat that you use so many materials native to your area. I can't cab sand or muddy clay.
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