I've been doing a little bit of trend research for Fall/Winter jewelry and I've got some ideas. Several of the trends are just horrid, I think... like the chunky neon chain thing... bleh. I won't make anything like that, I'm sorry. I try to use as little metal as possible most of the time and that would be entirely counterproductive. I saw a crochet pattern for large chain links that could be strung together, but I didn't like the look of that either. I'll stick with what I know.
There are a few things that did sound good though: Mixed media is huge. Wood and pearls on leather with a ribbon, braided denim cuffs, feathers, you name it. That's very good news for me considering the materials I like to use. Stacked bangle bracelets and cuffs are big too, and while I can't do the metalworking to make bangles I can figure out how to crochet cuffs with beads. I have a couple of patterns I'm playing around with to get that to work. Statement necklaces are still in, and while some of them are gawdy, that still leaves me with plenty of room to experiment. My statement pieces usually end up smaller than what's on the runway anyway, just because I know so few people who would actually buy something like that, but it does mean I can still use color. While I work on crocheting cuff bracelets, I'll work on crochet chokers as well. Vintage-made-new is something I should look into... maybe a couple trips to some local flea markets are in order.
Clothing trends are surprisingly bland. Lots of colorblocks, mostly with variations of beige, with occasionally something in red. Runway fashion makes me crazy... so little of it is actually wearable. A lot of it reminded me of a large taupe square paper sack that even makes the model look stupid.
This next batch of jewelry I'm working on is for the Sturgis Rally that's coming up. Soon, the Hills will be swarming with motorcycles and they will definitely be around town at the next Saturday show, so I have some ideas for biker-chic pieces to cater to that crowd.
We'll see how this one does... It has a fire agate center donut, hematite, bone, horn, and glass beads, strung on hemp 20" long when tied. The differing textures of all the beads didn't quite come through, but Mom took the good camera with her to Cleveland so this is what I'm stuck with. Oh well.
The heat has finally lifted a little. Finally, opening my windows lets in the cool evening air like usual! That hasn't been the case this last week or so. Hope you're all staying cool and hydrated!
Sarah makes beaded jewelry, composes orchestral and film music, dances, plays cello in the Black Hills Symphony, sells insurance, and frequently tackles home renovation projects.
Showing posts with label necklace. Show all posts
Showing posts with label necklace. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 20, 2011
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Push to Pageant Weekend!
Hot Springs is a small town, but for some reason or another, the Miss South Dakota Pageant has been held here for decades (if not since the beginning... having some trouble finding the dates for that, but it's not terribly relevant for my purposes). Having grown up here, left, and moved back, I can't quite figure out why something so big would stay here, but it's a huge deal for this little town. There's a whole weekend's worth of events structured around the pageant.
The event that's of most interest to me at this point is the annual Arts & Crafts Festival held in Centennial Park. It's a wonderful display of art, handicrafts, local businesses, local musicians, all of that. Someday I hope to be able to afford a table there (as well as the 3 days the event runs... I'd have to miss a day of work for that now), but this year it isn't in the cards. I'd need to sell everything I have to break even, so it's not an option. What I will do, however, is set up my table on Saturday morning on my usual corner at the White Elephant and hope to catch some of the parade traffic there. It may or may not work, we'll see.
Partly because of this and partly because of my decision to build my inventory and post more listings online, I'm beading like mad this week. Tonight I made two memory wire necklaces, a pair of earrings to match a necklace I made yesterday, and reworked the green necklace I made a couple of weeks ago.
This one has a yellow carved bone pendant and two similarly yellow carved soapstone beads. I employed my trusty color wheel to come up with the purple glass beads, and luckily I had a large amount of varying shades and finishes that were the first package of beads I ever bought. I thought it was time to try to use them up. That's a bit of a theme for me lately... I have lots of partially-used packages of beads that really just need to be worked with. I'm not a huge fan of using straight-across complementary colors on the color wheel... they tend to be a little too jarring for me, but after I worked with this combination a little it started to grow on me. I may try it more, if I have the right beads for it. We'll see what the public thinks this weekend. This is also the first memory wire necklace that I've beaded the whole way around. It really is a bit of an experimental piece, but what else to do with such a stunning pendant?
This one is more typical of my style. I have a package of dainty large leaf pendants, so I chose one of the smaller ones and added a symmetrical arrangement of shell and wood beads in greens, browns, and white, natural greenery tones to complement the leaf itself and lend their different textures. I love this piece, and it went together in about 10 minutes flat, so we'll see what the public thinks of this one also. Personally, it's one of my new favorites.
After making the green necklace a few weeks ago, I immediately started second-guessing myself. I took it to the Saturday show right after and I wore it for a little while, and my suspicions were confirmed. It was too long, it didn't lay right, and the daisy chain stitch just didn't work with the heavy soapstone centerpiece. Tonight I cut it apart and put the soapstone where it belongs, on a piece of hemp surrounded by shiny glass beads, unfinished wood beads, jade-green pony beads, and pale green soapstone. It's long enough to be about 18", but I prefer to tie it tighter. The center bead just lays better when it's closer to a choker length. This is a much better use of it.
Yesterday I made this necklace. One of these weeks I'll take the time to get some good photos. Maybe after Saturday.
It's simple, purple and white, 16" daisy chain with a faceted purple glass pendant and two small white shell beads on each side. It's sparkly, just sparkly enough to be a little dressy but not overly formal. Purple may be my new favorite color... it keeps showing up in my new clothes, new beads, new designs... I'm okay with that.
Luckily for me, there were smaller matching purple beads available, so I got them at the same time with the goal of making matching earrings. It's still a daisy chain, still the same white shells around the purple pendant, but in earring form they almost look like a helix, don't they? I like it. Lots. Again, we'll see how this set does this weekend.
Tomorrow I need to make more bracelets and anklets like this one just because they're fun (and to use up leftover beads). No two will be exactly the same of course, but I should try to do matching bracelets and anklets just in case. Hooray for progress! It was a good night!
The event that's of most interest to me at this point is the annual Arts & Crafts Festival held in Centennial Park. It's a wonderful display of art, handicrafts, local businesses, local musicians, all of that. Someday I hope to be able to afford a table there (as well as the 3 days the event runs... I'd have to miss a day of work for that now), but this year it isn't in the cards. I'd need to sell everything I have to break even, so it's not an option. What I will do, however, is set up my table on Saturday morning on my usual corner at the White Elephant and hope to catch some of the parade traffic there. It may or may not work, we'll see.
Partly because of this and partly because of my decision to build my inventory and post more listings online, I'm beading like mad this week. Tonight I made two memory wire necklaces, a pair of earrings to match a necklace I made yesterday, and reworked the green necklace I made a couple of weeks ago.
This one has a yellow carved bone pendant and two similarly yellow carved soapstone beads. I employed my trusty color wheel to come up with the purple glass beads, and luckily I had a large amount of varying shades and finishes that were the first package of beads I ever bought. I thought it was time to try to use them up. That's a bit of a theme for me lately... I have lots of partially-used packages of beads that really just need to be worked with. I'm not a huge fan of using straight-across complementary colors on the color wheel... they tend to be a little too jarring for me, but after I worked with this combination a little it started to grow on me. I may try it more, if I have the right beads for it. We'll see what the public thinks this weekend. This is also the first memory wire necklace that I've beaded the whole way around. It really is a bit of an experimental piece, but what else to do with such a stunning pendant?
This one is more typical of my style. I have a package of dainty large leaf pendants, so I chose one of the smaller ones and added a symmetrical arrangement of shell and wood beads in greens, browns, and white, natural greenery tones to complement the leaf itself and lend their different textures. I love this piece, and it went together in about 10 minutes flat, so we'll see what the public thinks of this one also. Personally, it's one of my new favorites.
After making the green necklace a few weeks ago, I immediately started second-guessing myself. I took it to the Saturday show right after and I wore it for a little while, and my suspicions were confirmed. It was too long, it didn't lay right, and the daisy chain stitch just didn't work with the heavy soapstone centerpiece. Tonight I cut it apart and put the soapstone where it belongs, on a piece of hemp surrounded by shiny glass beads, unfinished wood beads, jade-green pony beads, and pale green soapstone. It's long enough to be about 18", but I prefer to tie it tighter. The center bead just lays better when it's closer to a choker length. This is a much better use of it.
Yesterday I made this necklace. One of these weeks I'll take the time to get some good photos. Maybe after Saturday.
It's simple, purple and white, 16" daisy chain with a faceted purple glass pendant and two small white shell beads on each side. It's sparkly, just sparkly enough to be a little dressy but not overly formal. Purple may be my new favorite color... it keeps showing up in my new clothes, new beads, new designs... I'm okay with that.
Luckily for me, there were smaller matching purple beads available, so I got them at the same time with the goal of making matching earrings. It's still a daisy chain, still the same white shells around the purple pendant, but in earring form they almost look like a helix, don't they? I like it. Lots. Again, we'll see how this set does this weekend.
Tomorrow I need to make more bracelets and anklets like this one just because they're fun (and to use up leftover beads). No two will be exactly the same of course, but I should try to do matching bracelets and anklets just in case. Hooray for progress! It was a good night!
Monday, May 30, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Abstract in green
Spring is very slow to get started here. We've only broken 75 degrees a couple of days so far, the vast majority hovering around 60 with rain and wind. Let me tell you how un-thrilled I am about this. It's abnormal for this area for it to be so wet and chilly coming up on June, though I guess last year was about like this too. Not for this long, maybe... it took us until the middle of May last year to get 3 dry days in a row so that my mobile home could be moved up the hill, since it got stuck in the mud the first day we moved it. We haven't had many more dry days in a row than that so far this spring. It's wearing on my nerves and patience, being the solar-powered girl I am and considering the number of projects I need to work on outside that I'd like to get done before the heat of the summer hits.
I didn't start this post to whine! I'm sorry! What I meant to say was I have green on the brain. In more ways than one really, I'm ready for the lush leafy summer we're destined to have after all this moisture and I'm looking for more ways to be self-sufficient and reduce my carbon footprint. So far, that includes yogurt, which I'm still experimenting with, but that's for another day.
I found the soapstone centerpiece for this and have been wondering what to do with it. It's rather thick, mostly a pale green with some flecks of orange/coral, with a symmetrical shape and an asymmetrical carving on both the front and back. Considering the shape and size of it, I figured the necklace should be around choker length so it would lay the best. A comfortable slightly long choker length for me is 16", so that's what I went with here. It lays comfortably just below the hollow of my throat. Since the hole is drilled lengthways, it's not a pendant really on its own, but it's simple enough that I didn't want to overload it with anything too flashy. I beaded a simple daisy chain for it, alternating between green foil-lined bugle beads and matte bone white large seed beads, all surrounded by forest green seed beads. It's a simple piece, but I think the soapstone is showcased the way it should be.
It's time to build up my inventory for my next Saturday show. This one I'll be doing alone, but that's alright. More to come!
I didn't start this post to whine! I'm sorry! What I meant to say was I have green on the brain. In more ways than one really, I'm ready for the lush leafy summer we're destined to have after all this moisture and I'm looking for more ways to be self-sufficient and reduce my carbon footprint. So far, that includes yogurt, which I'm still experimenting with, but that's for another day.
I found the soapstone centerpiece for this and have been wondering what to do with it. It's rather thick, mostly a pale green with some flecks of orange/coral, with a symmetrical shape and an asymmetrical carving on both the front and back. Considering the shape and size of it, I figured the necklace should be around choker length so it would lay the best. A comfortable slightly long choker length for me is 16", so that's what I went with here. It lays comfortably just below the hollow of my throat. Since the hole is drilled lengthways, it's not a pendant really on its own, but it's simple enough that I didn't want to overload it with anything too flashy. I beaded a simple daisy chain for it, alternating between green foil-lined bugle beads and matte bone white large seed beads, all surrounded by forest green seed beads. It's a simple piece, but I think the soapstone is showcased the way it should be.
It's time to build up my inventory for my next Saturday show. This one I'll be doing alone, but that's alright. More to come!
Sunday, May 8, 2011
Fresh from the Desk: New pieces listed on Etsy!
My Etsy Shop now has double the listings it had before! Go check it out and see if there's anything that needs to go home with you! :)
Among the new pieces is this one, a slightly tribal carved bone pendant on Sterling Silver memory wire. I had a little trouble with what to do with this pendant. It's quite a statement piece, isn't it? My boyfriend looooooooooooooooves it. I love the nautilus spiral, but when I got it home I was at a loss for what to do with it. It sits slightly off-center just because of the shape and the placement of the drilled hole and I didn't have anything that would really complement it on a beaded or hemp necklace like I've been working with previously. I figured it was time to get the memory wire out again and I'm glad I did. This slightly tribal pendant needed a stronger treatment than hemp or a beaded chain, but I didn't want to go wild with colors either because it is such a strong piece on its own. I started looking through my black beads to see what I could come up with and came across my black iridescent Czech glass dagger drop beads that I haven't used in far too long. The fire polishing gives them a distinct green-blue iridescent shine on one side so it's been a little difficult for me to find an effective use for them as well. But, once I paired them with the pendant, it all started to come together. I got out the green shell spacers I used for the custom turtle necklace a while back, some black resin beads, and some silvery shell beads and strung it all on some memory wire so that it sits just at my collarbones. It could be stretched out to sit a bit lower, but I won't worry about that.
It's now available for $15 on my Etsy shop so go take a look if you'd like! Again, Happy Mother's Day to all you lovely Mamas out there!
Among the new pieces is this one, a slightly tribal carved bone pendant on Sterling Silver memory wire. I had a little trouble with what to do with this pendant. It's quite a statement piece, isn't it? My boyfriend looooooooooooooooves it. I love the nautilus spiral, but when I got it home I was at a loss for what to do with it. It sits slightly off-center just because of the shape and the placement of the drilled hole and I didn't have anything that would really complement it on a beaded or hemp necklace like I've been working with previously. I figured it was time to get the memory wire out again and I'm glad I did. This slightly tribal pendant needed a stronger treatment than hemp or a beaded chain, but I didn't want to go wild with colors either because it is such a strong piece on its own. I started looking through my black beads to see what I could come up with and came across my black iridescent Czech glass dagger drop beads that I haven't used in far too long. The fire polishing gives them a distinct green-blue iridescent shine on one side so it's been a little difficult for me to find an effective use for them as well. But, once I paired them with the pendant, it all started to come together. I got out the green shell spacers I used for the custom turtle necklace a while back, some black resin beads, and some silvery shell beads and strung it all on some memory wire so that it sits just at my collarbones. It could be stretched out to sit a bit lower, but I won't worry about that.
It's now available for $15 on my Etsy shop so go take a look if you'd like! Again, Happy Mother's Day to all you lovely Mamas out there!
Labels:
black,
bone,
green,
iridescent,
jewelry,
memory wire,
necklace,
shell,
shop,
tribal
Friday, May 6, 2011
Fresh From the Desk: Time for a change?
![]() |
| Purple glass donut pendant on off-white and matte blue daisy chain, with rose quartz chips |
![]() |
| Carved resin pendant on knotted hemp, with wood and bone beads |
![]() |
| Resin pendant on brown and off-white bead chain, with brown shell and peace jade |
I'm also starting to teach violin lessons next week. I'm not a violinist, and I never said I was, but I have taken the classes, I do play cello, I know the Suzuki method, and the student is only 6 years old. This one I may be able to handle for a little while. I'm nervous about it since I don't play violin, and haven't since that one half-semester in 2002 or something when I took the class. I'm debating advertising for my lessons and setting aside a day each week for them, but I'm nervous about getting lots of requests for instruments I don't play, like the violin. Piano or guitar, those I can pawn off on someone else in town...those I can't even pretend to play well enough to teach lol! Also, I don't have a good centralized location for them. My books, instruments, and tools are at my house, obviously, but it's not quite ready for company yet, it's not really set up for it anyway, and parking will be an issue if I have several in a row. Maybe once I get the island finished, baseboards in, latch on the bathroom door, and the huge wood box out of the living room...but I digress. My house isn't a good place right now. I could use my parents' house, but it's their house so I'm not comfortable taking it over for a whole day every week and the students might be nervous with extra people wandering around. I know I would be. For just a few students I could go to their houses, but that means I don't have access to all of my supplies that are at home and are impractical to lug around everywhere. Can't afford to rent anywhere, and the room at the State Home is way too big just for lessons and people wander in and out all the time. Haven't figured out the plan for this yet, obviously I'm still a bit anxious about it and finding excuses not to really develop it yet. Maybe after the lessons have been going for a while I'll have a little more confidence.
In order to shift my focus to jewelry and music, I need to cut down elsewhere. My regular job is fine, no problems there, it's a regular part-time schedule with minimal stress. It may go full-time eventually, but it's not yet. I have a once-a-month 20-minute job at the VA for $10, which is barely worth the trouble to get there but it's a jewelry vendor contact that I need to stay on top of. Not like it takes much time anyway. Symphony is done for the season, so that won't be in the picture again until the fall. I have lots of gardening, landscaping, and general housework to do, which hasn't been getting done these past few weeks. I'm on Weight Watchers now which requires more careful meal planning, which also hasn't been getting done very well. There's occasional things like groceries, bead shopping, and having to hold a large cat that is currently draped around my neck because I've been gone so much the last week.
Then, the major dilemma, I'm working an extra insurance day up in Rapid, every other week for 6 hours. It was originally 3 hours once a week, on the same day as Symphony, which after gas and a meal just broke even with itself, but it was alright since I had to be up there anyway. Now, we changed it to every other week so it takes less gas and therefore yields a little profit, but it still ends up being a whole day up there. I'm torn in that I can't decide whether that extra $60-80 a month (after gas) is worth losing a day. I really can't decide. I guess the question is whether shifting my focus will yield more return, though I do need to go up there every week or two anyway for various reasons. I really don't know. My schedule at my regular job has been screwy the last few weeks, so that plus starting WW plus getting ready for spring/working on the house again plus (heaven forbid!) taking a weekend trip to see some friends, I feel like I'm stretched way too thin, like silly putty. And, the little holes are growing the thinner I stretch. As it is, no project can get the attention it deserves, and as such nothing is yielding what it should. So, do I drop the extra day and use it elsewhere, or not? I just went yesterday and I'm not scheduled to go back until Monday after next so I have some time to decide. I keep going back and forth on it. I'm torn! Help!
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Saturday Show Number Two!
Just by way of a quick announcement, I'll be at The White Elephant again this coming Saturday, May 7th from 8am until Mom and I wear out. This time we'll be better prepared with shade and food than last time and hopefully the weather will cooperate.
If you're in the neighborhood, The White Elephant is a consignment shop at the corner of River St and University Ave, at the bottom of the viaduct, in Hot Springs, SD. I'm beading like a madwoman this week to prepare, since most of my necklaces sold last time, but here's a sneak peek of tonight's project. The pendant is purple glass, flanked by rose quartz chips and the rest of the chain is bone white and matte purple-blue stitched into a daisy chain. If you can't make it of course, feel free to contact me here, on Facebook, or on sarahdecker.com for your own custom piece. :)
Happy belated May Day to all and I hope the budding spring is treating you well!
If you're in the neighborhood, The White Elephant is a consignment shop at the corner of River St and University Ave, at the bottom of the viaduct, in Hot Springs, SD. I'm beading like a madwoman this week to prepare, since most of my necklaces sold last time, but here's a sneak peek of tonight's project. The pendant is purple glass, flanked by rose quartz chips and the rest of the chain is bone white and matte purple-blue stitched into a daisy chain. If you can't make it of course, feel free to contact me here, on Facebook, or on sarahdecker.com for your own custom piece. :)
Happy belated May Day to all and I hope the budding spring is treating you well!
Friday, April 1, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Everyday layering necklaces
Do you like them? My boyfriend's mom wanted one like this, in all silver (like the one on the far left) and after doing that and getting set up for the day at The White Elephant tomorrow, I thought these would be a cute way to boost my impulse buys as well as use up some beads that were sitting around.
From the left, since the colors are a little weird on my phone camera, they are: Silver/silver, white/pink, white/gold, brown/gold, white/blue, purple/pink, green/ble, pink/green, pink/red, teal/matte white, matte blue-ish/yellow.
I'll end up wearing one tomorrow to demonstrate and I think the matte blue-ish/yellow one is my favorite, but what do you think? Those bugle beads are a wonderful color, they're a little iridescent blue/purple but the matte finish gives them a very unique look that I thought would be nicely offset by the pale pearly yellow of the seed beads.
The silver/silver, brown/gold (which is also the colors for University of Wyoming where I got my undergrad...didn't realize that until halfway through hehe), and white/gold are meant to be neutrals, with the white/pink, pink/green, and blue/yellow a step above that, with the green/blue, purple/pink, and teal/white being more showy. They're 15 inches long with a 2 inch extender chain and spring clasp, made quickly using surplus beads so I can offer them at $10 each (or less, if someone wants more than one) without hurting at all. How would you wear them? Would you do wear one at a time or a few in complementary colors? What other color combinations would you want? Maybe I'll wear three to show the possibilities. Hmmm. I should go make sure all my display stuff is packed and signs are correct, need to get to bed so I can get up bright and early!
*Edit 5/11/11* These are now available on Etsy for $10 each!
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Soapstone heart necklace
Okay, so this isn't a brand new design, you caught me. But, it is part of my Spring/Summer 2011 line and it's available on Etsy for $15 so I thought it should get a little plug. I made it just before the show we went to before Valentine's Day and it got a lot of attention at the booth, but no takers for whatever reason. It's a soapstone heart on an 18" beaded chain. It's metal-free like many of my necklace designs so the clasp is a ball-loop closure with a leopard jasper bead in the same color scheme.
I've had the purple and teal seed beads for a while and have wanted desperately to use them, and I am working on a little square-stitch bracelet, but that will take far too long to finish to make it worth selling for what I'd have to charge for it. I happened across this lovely heart and had to use it somewhere, and luckily when I got it home I realized that those purple beads were exactly the right color. I used pale pink (almost white) bugle beads and bone-white seed beads as the centerpieces for the daisy-chain stitch. I brought in the teal beads because it was a little too monochromatic with just the purple/pink/white.
The transition from purple to teal was an experiment really, to see how it looked if I changed every other bead for a couple of "daisies" before changing completely to the other color. It's a unique look, though I keep going back and forth about whether I really like it or not. It looks better when worn than laid out, I think.
I'm generally not a fan of hearts in designs. I can't really explain why, except that there are so many used in so many designs everywhere and my natural instinct is to avoid things that are ordinary, overdone, or cliche. I don't like words in wall art either, which is getting increasingly prevalent.
Not sure what that had to do with anything, but there it is. I just hope that this doesn't fall into the "generic heart necklace" category and that someone will take it home and love it the way it deserves.
I've had the purple and teal seed beads for a while and have wanted desperately to use them, and I am working on a little square-stitch bracelet, but that will take far too long to finish to make it worth selling for what I'd have to charge for it. I happened across this lovely heart and had to use it somewhere, and luckily when I got it home I realized that those purple beads were exactly the right color. I used pale pink (almost white) bugle beads and bone-white seed beads as the centerpieces for the daisy-chain stitch. I brought in the teal beads because it was a little too monochromatic with just the purple/pink/white.
The transition from purple to teal was an experiment really, to see how it looked if I changed every other bead for a couple of "daisies" before changing completely to the other color. It's a unique look, though I keep going back and forth about whether I really like it or not. It looks better when worn than laid out, I think.
I'm generally not a fan of hearts in designs. I can't really explain why, except that there are so many used in so many designs everywhere and my natural instinct is to avoid things that are ordinary, overdone, or cliche. I don't like words in wall art either, which is getting increasingly prevalent.
Not sure what that had to do with anything, but there it is. I just hope that this doesn't fall into the "generic heart necklace" category and that someone will take it home and love it the way it deserves.
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Wooden flower necklace

This design is a bit of an experiment. But, really, aren't they all? I came across the large wooden flower in a clearance bin and just had to have it. It came with two matching leaves, which I'll probably make into a pair of matching earrings.
The main issue I had with this was the fact that the flower has no drilled hole like most pendants do, and I wasn't about to try and drill one myself. It's light and fairly thin and I probably could have, but I wanted the challenge of trying to make it work without drilling. I started with a daisy-chain stitch with very pale pink bugle beads with a lovely pearly finish. They're so pale I've had trouble using them before without them ending up looking white. I framed them with opaque bone-white seed beads which helps differentiate the colors a little bit, but subtly. The flower is enough of a statement that it didn't need wilder colors than that. I had some wooden beads on hand I used for the metal-free loop-ball clasp and above the flower on each side. The tassels have copper-colored Swarovski crystal pearls to add one more texture while staying within the color scheme. Noticing a trend with my texture obsession? lol.
The first idea I had for this wasn't quite like it ended up. The package had 2 flowers in it so I may try that later with blues instead and see how it turns out. The flower ended up being more of a stabilizing structural element than it looked at first glance in the package, but really, I'm okay with that. It gave me a chance to work with a different approach to a Y-shape necklace and to make another subtle statement piece. Is that a contradiction in terms? A subtle statement? Maybe not. I see a lot of people wearing large brightly-colored necklace and wonder what they're thinking...some of those things are sooooo ugly. There's nothing wrong with making a statement with some class, right? Right.
Wednesday, February 23, 2011
Fresh from the desk: Custom turtle necklace
My cousin is wonderful. She immediately ordered earrings from my Etsy shop to match the necklaces I had already sent her. She officially rocks my socks. Then, she proposed a challenge to me: she loves turtle jewelry but has had trouble finding any. I'm on it.Honestly, the hard part was finding the turtle pendant. I didn't have all day to look and I don't get up to Rapid City very often, so my shopping choices were Michael's and Hobby Lobby, and to get it done quickly enough that Mom and I weren't late for our respective rehearsals. There was one turtle pendant at Michael's. One. And it was bright shiny orange glass. Not exactly what I had in mind for my cousin, who is a character but with class. I suspect there may have been more that would usually be in stock, but there were a fair number of empty pegs in the charms/pendants section. Instead of making that one work, we tried Hobby Lobby next. It took forever, and the first 3 that we found were very childish-looking, but we finally found this little tortoise.
I wanted to keep the design simple and small but unique. I couldn't use any overly large or bright beads with the little guy or he'd be hidden (I've decided the bead is male. Yes. Why? Who knows. Does it matter? Not really.). I decided to stick with a green/silvery palette to avoid overdoing it, but instead focused on using several different textures within the color scheme. I prefer to use earthy materials rather than metals, partly because of my goal to keep my designs hypoallergenic and partly because i like to use different textures like woods, glass, gemstone chips, shells, and pearls to keep things different and interesting. We found Heishi river shell beads in the same green as the "belly" of the tortoise and iridescent labradorite chips to complement both the silver and dark green.
In this design, I see the rocky journey the desert tortoise must make across the shimmering desert sands and rocky iridescent hills to find the green sustenance he needs, to remind us that even if the journey is difficult it is necessary but can also be beautiful. Maybe that's corny. Maybe I've been staring at it too long. Maybe I need to go to bed. :)
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)











