Woodburned Bracelet

Because I can't get enough Kenshin!

Posted by Violinagin D.

About

I like woodburning. So I found this wooden bracelet blank, and decided to do this project. Though I didn't know what to do at first. So I had it for... several months... and then I made up my mind, so here is my project!

Open to tons of ideas!

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You Will Need (9 things)

  • Blank Wooden Bracelet Setting
  • Wood Burner
  • Watercolor Paint
  • Paint Brush
  • scrap Paper
  • Pencil(s)
  • Polyurethane
  • Wood Stain
  • metalic Paint

Steps (9 steps, 480 minutes)

  1. 1

    Start with your wooden blank and an idea. Sketch out everything so there are no suprises.

    Measure the circumfrence and width to make sure everything works out. (I didn't follow this step, but it would make it much easier.)

  2. 2

    Transfer your image to the braclet. You can use carbon paper, or whatever, or you can sight it. I just used a pencil. Soft pencil works well because you can erase well. Ink erasers and sandpaper work wonderfully for really, really big mistakes (like keeping it in your purse and getting ink splotches all over it)

  3. 3

    Don't forget the other side!

  4. 4

    Woodburn!

    I used a thin point and a thin flat caligraphy point, but the wedge point that comes with most pyrography tools would work just as well with a delicate touch. Erase the pencil after you've gotten all the lines down. If you make a mistake, sandpaper is your friend.

  5. 5

    Don't forget the other side.

  6. 6

    Watercolor!

    Thin, thin layers of watercolor, let the woodgrain shine through so it's almost like a stain. Except for white areas (not shown) and the very, very dark (bottom of kimono).

    (I forgot the other side.)

  7. 7

    I took a krylon gold leaf pen that I found at wal-mart and using a thumb tac did some really tiny designs in gold. There are little butterflies and dots all over!

  8. 8

    Stars! (And the watercolored side I forgot)

  9. 9

    Next, stain!

    Then, polyurethane.

    Or, I found this fun stuff called Polyshades. Stain and polyurethane in one easy step. I chose satin finish, but it also comes in high gloss.

    Put on one coat, let dry.

    One more coat..
    Let dry, and it's done! It takes FOREVER for this stuff to dry *sigh*

    Adds a kind of antique feel, and tones down the color, but the high metalic krylon gold still shines!