Polymer clay provides a all-around, lightweight and inexpensive action to make a Broad area of at variance objects. Paint or decorate your pendant. If you've used a clay ball as an eyeball, paint a vertical pupil on it. Coat the pendant with matte varnish to protect it, but give the eyeball a coat of gloss varnish to make it shine.
Instructions
1. Roll polymer clay into a thin folio. Assign a bead, marble or ball of polymer clay in the centre of the page.
2. Wrap the phase of polymer clay sorrounding the marble or ball until alone the front is visible. This Testament be the eyeball, the centre of your pendant. Trim and shape the wrinkle of the stage into a smooth path with a sculpting thing.
3. Habit up the nature encompassing the eyeball with successive layers of polymer clay until it reaches the desired shape.
4. Texture the clay using a sculpting tool. Cut wrinkles above and below the eyeball, following its curve. Add small dots of polymer clay here and there to represent rough, warty skin. Alternatively, press them down in rows to give a scaled appearance.
5. Insert a pendant ring into the upper end of the pendant, smoothing the clay over and making sure that it's firmly embedded.
6. Place the pendant in a standard convection oven to harden it. The exact length of time and temperature will depend on the type of clay you're using and the thickness of the pendant. For a typical small pendant, heat the oven to 120 degrees and heat for 10 to 20 minutes. Check the hardening process frequently to ensure the pendant doesn't burn.
7. Sculpting with polymer clay allows you to fabricate sui generis and distinctive jewellery and accessories, expressing your own creativity in one-of-a-kind objects. A dragon's eye pendant is a challenging and good polymer clay sculpting project. By combining polymer clay with other media and using a infrequent elementary sculpting techniques, you can dream up a enticing and evocative abundance of jewellery you can be dignified of.