About
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Back in the dark days of disco (1977), young Dan discovered the pleasures of forming, forging, and fusing metals.
It began in an art class, where wax was transformed into metal, and flights of fancy found root in brass and silver.
At this same St. Louis county education mill, he picked up his award-winning skills in photography, and an initial understanding of
quantum physics. "Physics?" you may well ask. The common thread is light. Photons. Those elusive, illusive wavicles which
reflect, refract, and shimmer from surfaces: Colors, images, refraction, holography, and shine.
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Above: Working on a multi-colored pure gold wedding band. Gold alloys comes in a variety of colors, such as red, yellow, green and white. |
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This is a sterling silver pin with anodized titanium
inlay. I consigned it to someone in the late 1980's, and she disappeared before I could collect. This is one of the hazards of the
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"Over the years, I've made several
sets of gold wedding rings (mostly for friends),
brass and silver shellform sculptures, and
titanium projects from small ear studs to large clocks."
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At Washington University, I learned the traditional skills of shellform silversmithing. You know, techniques such as those which Paul Revere and the artisans of the Pharoahs used. This was a brass shellform project, a cannister, which began as a project to set the 2 matched tiger-eye cabachons which are its eyes.
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| Titanium handed clock with 14" long minute hand.
(Click for details about another)
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Two titanium pendants made 6/2001
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