Thursday, 31 July 2014

Pokeball Earrings

These are a sort of tribute to a friend of mine who loves Pokemon and bad puns. You just have to make sure you catch them all.



You will need:

  • Two small, hollow plastic balls of some sort. Mine actually came from a magic trick my aunt brought back from Japan so if you can't think of another place to get some, I suggest looking there.
  • Red and white acrylic paint (those being two separate colours. I don't mean pink.)*
  • Black permanent marker
  • Drill with thin bit
  • Flat-end wire pins (see Vocab Tab)
  • Round-nosed pliers (see Vocab Tab)
  • Cutters (see Vocab Tab)
  • Basic earring hooks (see Vocab Tab)
*By the way Meredith, I borrowed your paint. It's on my desk if you need it.

How to:

The first step is the painting. If your spheres don't have a line around the middle you should probably draw one on first. Mine did though. So there.

Paint the white half first because then you can touch up with the red. You'll probably need to do a couple of layers depending on the base colour but try to keep it smooth and even. Usually you will be wearing them both, not taking a photo of the best one like I get to do, so keep it tidy.

After you've painted half of it red and half of it white and done enough layers of each colour and waited for it to dry properly, carefully draw a line around middle of the ball at in black permanent marker at the point where the red and white meet. It's best to keep it thin at first because you can thicken it to even it out.

Once you've drawn a line right around the ball, chose the messiest portion of that line to draw on the black circle. (This is the part that goes around the white button in the middle.) It's easiest to colour the whole circle in black and then pain in the white part on top. Again start small and make it bigger to get it even. Also keep in mind that it's important to get line thickness and circle size the same on both earrings. You're just going to have to assume I did that too.

I used the back of the paint brush to stamp the white circle in the middle of the black because I felt like it was more accurate than my trying to paint one.

Use the red and/or white paint to neaten up the black if you need to. You may only move onto the next step once your Pokeball looks perfect and is completely dry.

The next step is to drill a hole through the ball from the middle of the red at the top to the middle of the white at the bottom. I guess that you could drill from white to red if you really wanted to, but the important part is that you get the hole in the middle and keep it straight.

Insert a flat-end wire pin through the hole from the white side to the red. Getting the pin through can take patience. Cut of the protruding section of pin to about 1cm and twist it into a loop.

Finally you may attach the hooks and wear them.

Rating:

Effort Required: 6/10

When I took on this idea I didn't actually realize how long it would take and what a delicate process doing it freehand would be. I could probably have fetched some masking tape and made this twice as easy but then I would have had to get up and look for it. It's up to you whether or not to believe the effort score of someone too lazy to even make her own job easier.

Durability: 8/10

My brain is vaguely throwing out the objection that paint is not supposed to stick to plastic but this paint doesn't seem to know that. 

Cool Factor: 8/10

It's Pokemon. If you disagree with this score you probably never watched it as a kid which means you are either too young to be wielding a permanent marker, too old to be caring about how cool you look, or think Pokemon is evil - in which case you have more pressing issues.


No comments:

Post a Comment