Playing with Metal
Jewellery & Metalwork
It has been 60 years since Mike Ward made his first piece of jewellery. While he knows there are no shortcuts to becoming as good as one can be, from time to time Mike finds himself wishing he had known some of the things when he began that it has taken him a lifetime to discover.

The plan is to explore the skills and philosophy involved in the way Mike makes jewellery, providing a framework for others to get started or develop existing capabilities. This is a workshop for both the beginner and the experienced.

Whether a participant has never made jewellery, or has been fashioning festoonery for decades, Mike hopes that by the end of the workshop, they leave with at least a little something they have never made before, along with new skills. Mike’s reason for doing what he does is to make life more interesting for the people around him; he hopes participants leave feeling fired up about combining what they have learned with what they already know into something uniquely their own—asking the "why not?", "what if?", and "what else?" questions about everything they put their hand to.
Event Details
Timing: Afternoon (2pm - 5pm)

Price: $75 (PWYW)

Materials provided: A range of scrap brass bronze and copper... and perhaps a little silver.

What to bring: An open mind and any scraps or tools you would like to work with (optional).

You will leave with: Something for yourself or someone you care about.

Where: NMIT Workshop G121

Age suitability: 16+

June 14, 2026 2:00 pm

NMIT Workshop G121

Price: $75 (PWYW)

No spaces left
To be added to a waiting list, you can email hello@makeitnelson.co.nz

June 28, 2026 2:00 pm

NMIT Workshop G121

Price: $75 (PWYW)

No spaces left
To be added to a waiting list, you can email hello@makeitnelson.co.nz

Mike Ward

Mike Ward is a Nelson artist, writer, adventurer and occasional politician... and a former school teacher. He retired as head of Tokoroa High School’s art department 48 years ago, returned to Nelson and has been fashioning jewellery from the stuff the plumber and electrician leave behind, (as well as other people’s coin collections, cutlery, canvas and assorted detritus) and putting his hand to whatever takes his fancy, including numerous wearable art entries, a lot of illustrations and anything others think he might be up for, ever since.

He graduated with a Dip Fine Arts in sculpture from Canterbury University in 1968.


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