Let’s Get ‘Er Done

Since I’m in the process of setting the bulk of Nicola’s books wide I figured I’d do the same for my alt history mystery novel A Most Malicious Murder, my short story collection Random Realities, and the two anthologies I manage for my crit group.

Mind you, the bulk of them were already essentially wide—AMMM was the only one that had ever been in KU. But I realized that neither the short story collection nor the anthos had been uploaded to Google Play. Well, we can’t have that, now, can we?

So AMMM is now fully wide, as is Tales From a Lone Star (A Future Classics Anthology Volume One), and I’ll be creating the Google Play versions of Random Realities and A Lone Star in the Sky (A Future Classics Anthology Volume Two) later today.

Then I get to go back to the nine pending titles that still need to be converted and uploaded. This indie publishing gig isn’t for the weak, I can tell you that.

Yay, My Investment Came!

No, not that kind of investment. I mean the super-fine casting powder that can be used when casting lost wax figures that are then melted out in a kiln and metal is poured into the void.

And no, I’m not doing that, either. For one thing, I don’t have a kiln. But investment can also be used in a soldering technique where you put delicate, fiddly pieces of a setting together on some plasticine, then form a barrier around them and pour on a layer of investment. Once the investment, which can take incredibly high temperatures, is bone dry you turn it over, peel off the plasticine, and the jewelry parts remain in the investment and are ready to be soldered together on the bottom.

This has two benefits:

  1. I don’t have to hold my breath while putting together fiddly bits or worry about bumping something out of alignment.
  2. Soldering everything on the bottom keeps the top looking clean and pristine and means a lot less cleanup for me.

I’m going to make up some bracelet links this weekend with this method and see how well it works. I think it’s going to make my job as a silversmith a lot easier.

More Stuff in the Pipeline

Looks like I’ll be doing another graduation quilt, and this one is going to be a t-shirt quilt which I’ve wanted to take a crack at for some time. So I’ve got that going for me.

In other news my heroically sized ass will be stuck to my office chair for, oh, the rest of the week while I format a buttload of Nicola books for wide release (and possibly some of my own—I think it’s time Random Realities gets a new cover, don’t you?). Which is a good thing—a lot of authors I know are making the move to wide right now and hopefully the loss of my KU income will be covered by audiobooks and sales on B&N/Apple/Kobo/et al.

But nobody can buy those books if they’re not on the platforms so I’m busily formatting away and making everything pretty. Just another day in the life of a small businesswoman, you know.

In the meantime Jeremy has decided that he must talk to me constantly, stay at my side whenever I’m downstairs, and generally make a pest of himself. He’s got enough food and clean water and I’m giving him treats—I think he’s realizing that he hadn’t done himself any favors by annoying the girls for the past few tears. They pretty much avoid him now, and now that J.J.’s gone I think the big lug is kinda lonely.

So I now have an orange shadow in addition to the grey stripey one. Whee…

And That’s a Wrap

Just finished a project for a client who wanted me to do an illustrated cover for her contemporary romantic comedy. It’ll be coming out in June and I’ll post links here for interested folks—it sounds like it’s going to be hella fun.

I still have to make some ad graphics and a paperback cover for her, but she needed the ebook cover ASAP and the paperback cover will be based on the ebook cover, so this pretty much completes all of the paid commissions I have at the moment. Coming up are requests to see if I can make a custom Apple watch bangle from a pair of sterling forks (my buddy T also wants one of these if I can do it), a t-shirt quilt, and a coin for a roleplaying game. In between getting all of the Nicola books put into Vellum and published wide, finishing the current Nicola WIP, and starting the next two books on the writing table, of course.

I would very much like a cruise right now, thank you.

Hot Off the Bench

This is a pendant I made for a friend and colleague who saw a golden rutilated quartz pendant I’d made as a giveaway and wanted to know if I could make her something similar.

So I found a stone she liked that was very similar to the first pendant, ordered it, and when it arrived I realized it was faceted (the first pendant had a smooth cabochon). Since facets really deserve prong settings I decided to make my first double gallery (that refers to the “basket” that the stone sits in) prong setting with V-shaped prongs, which were also a first for me.

After watching a LOT of instructional videos on YouTube I got to work. The galleries are made from 16g square wire with 16g spacers, then I created the V prongs for the ends. Why did it need V prongs, you ask? Because any stone with a pointy end on it like a marquise (the shape of this stone), pear, or square needs extra protection on the pointy corners to make sure they don’t get chipped. A V prong has a groove cut out for the girdle of the stone to fit into, plus an extra pocket burred out for the very tip of the corner that protects it from being banged around and chipped.

Said a prayer to Hephaestus and soldered on the V prongs and round prongs. To my delight nothing fell off or melted in the process so I trimmed everything, soldered on a jump ring and bail, polished off any extra solder, tumbled it in the burnisher, cut the grooves for the stone’s girdle and the pockets for the stone’s tips, then carefully seated the stone…

…and it popped right in without a problem. I tell you, I was shocked. I could have simply pushed in the prongs and rounded their tops but because this is a big ol’ stone I wanted the extra security of claws holding it in place along with the V prongs. The client has seen a picture and is happy with it, which is all that matters in the end.

But the really nice thing about this is that I can now make a setting for my teardrop moldavite (a forest green, olive green or blue greenish vitreous silica projectile glass that was formed by a meteorite impact in southern Germany and is considered a gemstone) and wear it as a pendant.

Editing As Fast As I Can

So here I am, busily loading in Nicola’s no-longer-in-KU books into Vellum to prep them for wide release, when I discover that, wahey, apparently formatting does not always transfer over perfectly. So if only part of a paragraph is italicized in the Word doc, there will be instances where the entire paragraph gets italicized in Vellum.

Which means that I now need to go through each damn manuscript and check for formatting weirdnesses. And of course since I’m in there I really should check for any spelling/grammar/punctuation weirdnesses that might have slipped by my editor, my betas, and me.

So instead of popping a Word doc into Vellum, doing a quick pass to make sure the pages have the correct categories, and uploading the results to B&N, Apple, Kobo et al, I now have to play editor for *counts* eleven manuscripts.

Oh, did I mention the hellacious hailstorm that hit my neighborhood this afternoon? All the weather services said that we might get some rain and maybe a thunderstorm, no biggie, so I didn’t bother to put the car into the garage.

We got quarter-sized hail, people. The pool looked like it was boiling, and my car is now ever so lightly dimpled. Hopefully most of them will pop out with the application of hot weather, but the one time I don’t rack the car in the garage…

And people wonder why I drink.

My Finger Is Fine, Thank You

And no, I’m not going to show it to you. There’s the tiniest black spot under the nail plate next to the cuticle that is obviously an eensy clot and the tip of the finger is a bit tender, but that’s about it. All in all, it could have been a lot worse.

And may I just say that trying to type with a band-aid over a fingertip is a royal PITA. I kept making I don’t know how many mistakes while I was working today, to the point where I finally yanked off the band-aid and went with a smaller one that just wrapped around the finger instead of going over the tip.

In other news I’m starting a commissioned piece that is going to be a number of firsts for me and has the potential to go dreadfully wrong. I’m building my first double gallery collet out of 16g square sterling wire, creating my first V prongs, and then I have to solder everything together without melting anything or causing any parts to drop off (because why make things difficult for myself when I can make them really, REALLY difficult).

That being said, I am going to order myself some investment (the super-fine Plaster of Paris-like mixture that can take very high temps and is used when casting fine jewelry) so that I can use a technique where I position setting parts on some plasticine, set up a barrier around them, pour investment over them, and when the investment is bone dry pull off the plasticine and solder the underside of the parts together. It’s a lot easier than shoving prongs into a soft charcoal block and praying that they stay in place while I solder them to a collet.

Or I can just buy some Hold It soldering clay. I dunno. But I do know there are easier ways to put together small, complex setting parts than the way I’ve been doing it.

Ow Ow Ow

Bench injury story—feel free to skip if injuries squick you.

So I was sawing some swirls out of a sterling silver spoon today (really ornate silver spoons are 1) surprisingly cheap and 2) great sources for decorative bits that I can use on jewelry) and the saw blade broke.

Now, this happens regularly—jeweler’s saw blades are very fine, less than a millimeter wide and a tiny fraction of that in depth. Unfortunately, this time the blade broke while I was bringing the saw down and I drove the upper blade fragment through the nail on my left middle finger, right next to the cuticle. Ow.

Since I’ve injured myself at the bench before I knew what to do. I squeezed the fingertip gently to get the wound bleeding freely (this helps flush out anything that might have been driven into the nail bed), washed it thoroughly, put on some of the good antibiotic ointment I got last year at the hospital, and bandaged it. It’s making typing a bit of a challenge but I think it should be okay—none of the saw blade got left in the wound. If it swells or turns funny colors I’ll head into the doctor and get them to look at it.

And yes, I had a tetanus shot five years ago so I’m good on that. I was talking about it with Lyndon later on and he said, “Don’t take this the wrong way, but to be honest I’m surprised you don’t have more injuries from making jewelry.” It helps that I’m careful and precise, but sometimes things slip and you wind up slicing open a thumb or stabbing a nail. *shrugs* It happens.

Ah, Saturday

Which for me usually means cleaning and catching up on any business paperwork, but hey, it’s still the weekend. I think I’m going to celebrate by rewatching Season 2 of Bridgerton and relaxing once the day’s chores are done. Technically I suppose I should go out and do some fence repairs in the back yard, but we keep having intermittent rain storms and climbing on a metal ladder is probably not the best of all possible ideas in that situation. There’s always next week.

In other news it appears that I will be attending Armadillocon this year, which will be entertaining. I’ll need to order some copies of A Most Malicious Murder in case anyone wants one, tra la. I’m also very happy that Elizabeth Moon (aka Captain of the SFWA Musketeers, aka Ma Capitaine) will also be attending, which means I’ll be able to catch up with her.

A Nice Surprise

Not only did I make two jewelry sales, but people are starting to pay for my Vella story (written as Nicola) so I’ve got that going for me. Now if I could just rustle up some contract work and send the Brit home for two weeks things would be magic.

In other news I’ve got a weekend full of business work ahead of me (I need to start a business PayPal account so that I can sell books and jewelry through the website, start reading Zoe York’s books on the business side of indie romance publishing, update all of my income/expenses spreadsheets, and tweak my Amazon ads), plus I really need to do a big stock-up shop and give the bathrooms a deep clean.

I keep thinking that eventually I’ll have a weekend where I can just relax, read, watch TV, that sort of thing. I still remember a Sunday many years ago when the house was clean, I’d gotten all of my tasks done for the week, I didn’t have any jewelry projects on the go, and I spent the afternoon on the couch reading. It was freaking magical. I would like to experience that again.

In the meantime, however, there is work to do. So I’m gonna do it.