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OOAK Cabochon - Fordite - FreeformOOAK Cabochon - Fordite - FreeformOOAK Cabochon - Fordite - Freeform

OOAK Cabochon - Fordite - Freeform

$31.16

  • Only 1 Available Online
  • Only 1 remain In-Store
  • SKUs79963
  • Availability :In Stock
Fordite, or Detroit Agate, is a by-product of the automotive industry. Fordite is made from the built-up layers of cured paint from the spray-painting booths. Blocks of vintage paint have been salvaged and cut and shaped and polished, the various colours of paint show as delightful patterns and...
Colour Family: Blues

General Shape: Freeform

Package Size: Each

Stone Categ: Cabochon

Stone Availability: OOAK

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Description

Fordite, or Detroit Agate, is a by-product of the automotive industry. Fordite is made from the built-up layers of cured paint from the spray-painting booths. Blocks of vintage paint have been salvaged and cut and shaped and polished, the various colours of paint show as delightful patterns and shapes. There is a limited supply of this fascinating material, as cars are now magnetized and sprayed so that the paint sticks directly to the vehicle and there is no overspray. The material is very lightweight, and there is no residual odor.

31mm x 42mm By the each.

More Info 

OOAK Cabochon - Fordite - Freeform


<p> Cabochons!</p> <p> You asked - we deliver. Cabochons are a domed topped stone with a flat back - and you see them used in those spectacular ads on the backs of beading magazines where someone has spend hundreds of hours beading those wonderful bead collars - riffing off the colours and patterns in a central stone cab.</p> <p>  </p> <p> The general technique is to glue down the cabochon to some super-suede or some Lacey's stiff stuff, and then start beading a "bezel" around it to hold it in place, and then embellish from there. There's a tutorial <a href="http://jewelrymaking.about.com/library/weekly/aa072900.htm" target="_blank">here</a> for more details. </p> <p>  </p> <p> Of course - cabochons have been mounted in traditional fabricated metal jewelry for eons, and can also be used in metal clay projects - but we do NOT recommend firing these. (Make the piece first and add the stone after.) We have no idea what will happen to them when fired. Except the dyed turquoise howlite - I can tell you what happens to that! It disappears! Just a little pile of white ash left. :-(</p>