On the last day of IMTM, April 30, my breastcollar was finished. Yes I detest deadlines, but sometimes they are useful! I scrambled to get pictures, choose one, process it and upload it before midnight (actually, before dinnertime). The total hours for this part of the saddle (which includes the test cheek-piece), came out at an astounding 77, all within the month of April. Not something to confess when I've been turning down tack wish-orders!
I owe a debt of gratitude to International Model Tack Month, for they gave me the impetus to complete this significant portion of the saddle. While I feel I barely contributed to their overall group, I did try to show 'how I did it' with the blog posts. This post will give closer views and also show a variety of horses wearing the finished breastcollar.
When I told my sister about it she charmingly referred to the piece as a 'breastplate.' Given all that metal, she's not so far off.
This next shot may make things look crooked, but recall the extreme flexion of the near fore. Look closely at the alignment of the top and bottom of the chest shield: It is centered on the horse. I lined up two flame pieces so that the bend of the near shoulder would fall upon leather not metal, a trick also seen in the above pic.
The last part of the breastcollar's design process was to fall in love with the idea of shading the red garnets through oranges and darker yellows to the lightest citrines, which were almost white, creating a stream of color within the silver flames. Naturally then I had to redress some of the near side work! In the below shot you can see some good closeups of the resulting gradations. Usually they went red-to-yellow from bottom-to-top, as flames really do; but in some cases I went yellow-to-red, just for contrariness.
The halves do not match. That would've been impossible with my assortment of gemstones and my laissez-faire method of apportioning them -- I'm making this up on the spot and I still have a whole saddle to do. I also submit I was changing my mind almost up to the very end. Organized?!? What I was organized about was giving myself the freedom to attend to smaller details later for several of the steps. The pattern of the engraving and the choosing and setting of the stones was where I did nearly all the work right at the moment of creation.
This may change as I move on to other parts of the saddle and the process becomes more fixed. But we'll just see how it goes.
Let's look at other horses trying out this beauty. The obvious first choice is Kotinga. I tilted my camera so he was 'uphill' and used macro zoom so he wasn't big-headed.
This is Spirit of Cinnamon, my Stone 'Moonstruck' ASB. This horse was my only one of this mold for the longest time,... and was the hardest to find, as is typical of specific older Stones (and newer ones, hah). What surprised me was how the red-gold glow of the breastcollar picked up on this color of mulberry gray.
Like so many insights, this one seems obvious in hindsight!
This Year of the Flame Horse breastcollar, in its design and with the saddle that will go with it, has an epigram, one of those little paragraphs at the beginning of the chapter which purports to reflect what is to come. An epigram also provides inspiration, and I'm pretty sure this one did that. I don't know how to expand the margins (to central-set a block of text) with blogger! so we'll fall back on italics.
"... It was in his palm, warm to the touch, one of the most beautiful things he had ever seen. Gold of several different colors had been beaten together with great craftsmanship to make its crossed-circle shape, and on all sides it was set with tiny gems, rubies and emeralds and sapphires and diamonds, in strange runic patterns that looked oddly familiar to Will. It glittered and gleamed in his hand like all kinds of fire that ever were ... ... Merriman said softly, "The Light ordered that I should be made."... ... from every light in the hall the circle of worked gold caught brilliance, flickering as if it were made of flame."
--- The Dark is Rising, by Susan Cooper (1973)
And here's Kotinga wearing #458's breastcollar along with the so-called Russian Parade saddle, a piece made by Cary Nelson.
Although the clash between the two artists' tastes is plain, there yet is an overall congruence. Each of these halves is a brown-colored silver parade saddle with rows of spots. The gold accents on the breastcollar go very well with the golden horse, while the black notes on the so-called Russian lend pop and weight, leaning towards the more traditional interpretation of a parade set. I was surprised at how well these two disparate parts looked together. They both have curly stuff --- !
Let's consider this fair warning of my (hopefully!) next blog subject.



















































