I honestly cannot remember how I came to possess this lovely gold on sterling silver vintage brooch which featured carved gemstone flowers and leaves. I have the actual box and accompanying slip of paper which is why I know it was designed by Canadian artist, Richard Shorty of the Southern Tuchone tribe. He was active in the 1980's.
The brooch is still in great condition but two of the flowers had fallen out as well as a bit of old glue residue - look closely at the picture below.
The glues come with caps which are replaced with nozzles. I snipped the end of the nozzle to use the glue. The red caps are then used to keep the glue bottle sealed. Fine nozzles also come with the glue for applications that need those. These tend to clog up after use so they have to be switched out to the regular nozzle/red cap for storage. I will have to try and clean the fine nozzles with 100% acetone as recommended by the manufacturer and see if I can recycle them.
Watch my 2 min Youtube short on how I repaired the brooch!
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Original Post by THE BEADING GEM
What a gorgeous brooch. I'm so glad you were able to repair it.
ReplyDeleteSo am I! I was never that fond of brooches but lately, I have been wearing them especially on coats and jackets.
DeleteI thought that we should never use glue with coral for it is an organic material. So thanks for the tutorial.
ReplyDeleteThe original used some sort of glue. There is no other way of attaching the gemstones with metal. The problem with all glues is eventually they do fail. This brooch is about 40 years old. Same with knotted pearl necklaces and elasticated bracelets - those stringing materials will have to be replaced from time to time.
DeleteLove the brooch! Thank you for the tutorial.
ReplyDeletePainstaking, and the brooch is worth it! Thank you for the valuable information on your personal experience with glues.
ReplyDelete