Thursday, July 10, 2014

Various Wax Seal Cross Pendant made of Fine Silver

monoArtisan's Wax seal cross is made under the concept that I meet true my self only after I myself melt down.

The wax has been used from ancient time as the source material for creating jewelry.


 Latin Cross

Design and shape the wax as you want, go through gypsum casting, pour the melt gold or silver in 900 to 1000 degrees centigrade, then wax melt down and replaced by gold or silver. If the wax doesn't completely melt down, you cannot get the exact shape that you designed same, in case you don't kill your own ego, the Holy Spirit cannot come inside of you.

 Latin Cross

Wax cross necklace has adopted the wax seal stamping techniques in the Middle Ages that were used for the precious letter or official documents. The pattern of wax seal represents the symbol or monogram showing their status or position in the past.

I made the Cross pattern here in addition.

The wax cross necklace pendant is made of pure silver 99.9%, which represents pure faith in God. This pendent can be a very good gift for your precious people on Christening, wedding, bride maids, birthday, and other special celebration.


The wax cross necklace pendant is made of pure silver 99.9%, which represents pure faith in God. This pendent can be a very good gift for your precious people on Christening, wedding, bride maids, birthday, and other special celebration.


Bottony cross




bottony refers to a symbol having a bud or button, or a kind of trefoil, at the end; furnished with knobs or buttons. Hence, a cross bottony (or "botonny") is a cross having each arm terminating in three rounded lobes, forming a sort of trefoil. From the religious point of view, the cross bottony can be used as a symbol of the Christian Trinity.

A cross bottony which is heraldically "counterchanged" occurs on the flag of Maryland. [By Wikipedia]


Celtic Cross

In Ireland, it is a popular legend that the Celtic Christian cross was introduced by Saint Patrick or possibly Saint Declan during his time converting the pagan Irish, though there are no examples from this early period. It has often been claimed that Patrick combined the symbol of Christianity with the sun cross, to give pagan followers an idea of the importance of the cross by linking it with the idea of the life-giving properties of the sun. Other interpretations claim that placing the cross on top of the circle represents Christ's supremacy over the pagan sun. [ by Wikipedia]


Jerusalem Cross

Jerusalem cross necklace is made of Pure Silver(99.9%,Fine Silver) by monoArtisan Studio.
cross necklace has all different shape like the human face.

The Jerusalem cross, also known as Crusaders' cross or the "Five-fold Cross", is a heraldic cross or Christian symbol consisting of a large cross potent surrounded by four smaller Greek crosses, one in each quadrant.There are variants to the design, also known as "Jerusalem cross", with either the four crosslets also in the form of Crosses potent, or conversely with the central cross also in the form of a Greek cross

The symbolism of the five-fold cross is variously given as the Five Wounds of Christ, Christ and the four quarters of the world, Christ and the four evangelists. The "false blazonry" used for the Kingdom of Jerusalem ("metal upon metal", i.e. or (gold) on argent (silver)) was connected to Psalms 68:13, which mentions a "dove covered in silver, and her feathers with yellow gold".[1] The symbolism of five crosses representing the Five Wounds is first recorded earlier in the 11th century, with the consecration of the St Brelade's Church under the patronage of Robert of Normandy (before 1035); the crosses are incised in the church's altar slab. [by wikipedia info]



crosslet Cross



A cross with the ends of each arm crossed. A prominent early example is in the arms of the Beauchamp earls of Warwick. In early armory it is not always distinguished from a cross bottony. A variant is the cross crosslet double crossed,[19] with two bars crossing each arm, as in the arms of Robert Willoughby, 1st Baron Willoughby de Broke(d.1502) sculpted on his tomb at Callington Church, Cornwall. It appears in the canon of the arms and flag of the Episcopal Church. [By Wikipedia]





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