Buffalo Thunder Kachina Wind Chime Sculpture
The Buffalo Thunder Kachina rustic wind chime sculpture is made exclusively from salvaged or repurposed metal. The body and arms come from old steel tubing. The lightning bolt and fingers are from reclaimed snap ties. The wind chimes are copper.
Unlike most of my pieces, the rust has been removed from a good deal of the body to reveal a silver-like color. Highlights include sky blue-colored 3D accents and a petroglyph inspired buffalo image plasma cut by hand into the body. (The zigzag design was made with the use of an angle grinder in my pre-plasma cutting days.)
Dimensions:
76 inches tall
38 inches wide
13-inch base diameter
Plus, 10% of profits go the Navajo Water Project.
The Buffalo Thunder Kachina rustic wind chime sculpture is made exclusively from salvaged or repurposed metal. The body and arms come from old steel tubing. The lightning bolt and fingers are from reclaimed snap ties. The wind chimes are copper.
Unlike most of my pieces, the rust has been removed from a good deal of the body to reveal a silver-like color. Highlights include sky blue-colored 3D accents and a petroglyph inspired buffalo image plasma cut by hand into the body. (The zigzag design was made with the use of an angle grinder in my pre-plasma cutting days.)
Dimensions:
76 inches tall
38 inches wide
13-inch base diameter
Plus, 10% of profits go the Navajo Water Project.
The Buffalo Thunder Kachina rustic wind chime sculpture is made exclusively from salvaged or repurposed metal. The body and arms come from old steel tubing. The lightning bolt and fingers are from reclaimed snap ties. The wind chimes are copper.
Unlike most of my pieces, the rust has been removed from a good deal of the body to reveal a silver-like color. Highlights include sky blue-colored 3D accents and a petroglyph inspired buffalo image plasma cut by hand into the body. (The zigzag design was made with the use of an angle grinder in my pre-plasma cutting days.)
Dimensions:
76 inches tall
38 inches wide
13-inch base diameter
Plus, 10% of profits go the Navajo Water Project.