Cuffs

The edge of a vintage serving tray remade into a cuff.


Solid titanium cuff. Originally made by Otto bock (a prosthetics manufacturer) this material was found in a Minnesota scrap metal yard before I shaped into an absurdly rigid cuff.


A piece of a shot down WWII fighter plane. The Messerschmitt Bf 109. Nothing says says victory like wearing the shot down scrap of your enemy as jewelry.


Part of the exhaust transition assembly from the series of planes that dropped the first atomic bombs. The B29 bomber. Surplus that never made it to the field.


Some copper cuffs. I think the first one is my favorite.


From a decretive bronze tray. I loved the density of the texture for a cuff.


A piece of a plaque one might find near the entrance of a building.


The bracketing of a Victorian oil burning lamp.


Various silver plated trays.


The Microturbo tri60-2. A small jet engine found at a scrap metal yard.


A small piece the V2 rocket. This one was pulled up out of a swamp in Poland by a grandpa and his grandson.