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Sliced d20 as cabochon?
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<blockquote data-quote="takyris" data-source="post: 4168363" data-attributes="member: 5171"><p>After seeing a couple of Etsy stores in which people used dice to make jewelry (pendants and earrings, mostly), I was hit by the awesome coolness that would come from taking a d20, slicing it cleanly in half, and using the half-die as the stone for a ring. (I used the term cabochon, but since it's not smoothed out, that might not be right.)</p><p></p><p>(I'm aware that this is reeeeeeal geeky. I'm in a geeky mood right now.)</p><p></p><p>Sadly, when I queried the woman who made the jewelry, she said that making a clean cut like that would be hard with her equipment, and finding a ring base to mount something like that on might be hard as well.</p><p></p><p>I am a semi-precious-stone ring junkie. It's the one form of jewelry I like wearing, and I've recently had to increase the size of what my wife calls my bling box because the sheer amount of moonstone and tigerseye and citrine and lapis filled up the old one. And the idea of having some nice Chessex Scarlet Scarab d20 to wear as my Geeking Ring on gamedays fills me with all kinds of happy.</p><p></p><p>Anybody got any ideas on how I could make this happen?</p><p></p><p>Note: I've seen the "full d20 mounted on a ring" pieces. Those look absurd. The reason I like the half-cut d20 idea is that from a distance, it looks like, you know, an actual ring, not a pinball you've glued to your knuckle.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="takyris, post: 4168363, member: 5171"] After seeing a couple of Etsy stores in which people used dice to make jewelry (pendants and earrings, mostly), I was hit by the awesome coolness that would come from taking a d20, slicing it cleanly in half, and using the half-die as the stone for a ring. (I used the term cabochon, but since it's not smoothed out, that might not be right.) (I'm aware that this is reeeeeeal geeky. I'm in a geeky mood right now.) Sadly, when I queried the woman who made the jewelry, she said that making a clean cut like that would be hard with her equipment, and finding a ring base to mount something like that on might be hard as well. I am a semi-precious-stone ring junkie. It's the one form of jewelry I like wearing, and I've recently had to increase the size of what my wife calls my bling box because the sheer amount of moonstone and tigerseye and citrine and lapis filled up the old one. And the idea of having some nice Chessex Scarlet Scarab d20 to wear as my Geeking Ring on gamedays fills me with all kinds of happy. Anybody got any ideas on how I could make this happen? Note: I've seen the "full d20 mounted on a ring" pieces. Those look absurd. The reason I like the half-cut d20 idea is that from a distance, it looks like, you know, an actual ring, not a pinball you've glued to your knuckle. [/QUOTE]
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Sliced d20 as cabochon?
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