Showing posts with label beadweaver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beadweaver. Show all posts

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Some work that was gifted, sold or otherwise left my home over the holidays!

I have not been able to post very much lately, but beadwork has been coming and going!  Here are some photos of recent pieces that are hopefully out there in the world being worn...

The first two are Sabine Lippert designed components that I made into simple pieces.  She is so incredibly talented.  I love her designs and love to make about 1/8th of each one and get it on a rope so I can wear it!  Her pieces usually have dozens of these little components all hooked up to make something spectacular.  I am chicken, though, and tend to wear only one at a time...



This is a bead-embroidered cabochon, I have no idea what the stone is - some sort of agate?  It is pink - sort of dusty rose or cranberry I guess.  I got the matching semi-precious gems at Bead Show last year but of course forgot to write down what they heck they are either...

This one is a kumihimo braid using Delicas, which are very expensive but worth every penny for the effect.  Kind of looks like baby dragon scales, no?  The clasp is sterling and one of my favorite finds from Bead Show last year.



I did some of these really simple bead crochet strands before our trunk show, using fire polished and Czeck pressed glass, with antique buttons as closures (from Raven Beads).  These are wrap bracelets - the pink one wraps three times and the blue and green wrap twice.  Very hip, also an unusual style for me.


 My very first bead crochet tube with a magnetic clasp:


Twisted Cubic Right Angle Weave WHAAAAT???  Yes!  And SO FUN TO MAKE, thanks to Gwen Fisher for the tutorial:


Finally, a kumihimo rope using size 8 Picasso beads.  These beads are sooooo lovely - mottled and almost antique looking. 




Sunday, July 22, 2012

My Challenge Piece for Etsy Beadweavers in August is POSTED!



After being a member for months, I have finally entered by first Etsy Beadweavers Challenge!  The prize for winning is picking the next month's challenge.  There are 12 challenges per year and I am inspired to start entering more of them afte rthe fantastic experience I had making this piece.  There are about 250 beadworkers from all over the world on the team, which is moderated by several wonderful bead artists.

I am really proud to say I designed all of the beaded beads here save one, the red netted bead which is her "Easy Netted Bead" from Diane Fitzgerald's Netted Beadwork.  The rules of the challenge state clearly that I have to have designed the piece and not used any pattern or tutorial, but this is one easy beaded bead that I needed to balance the rest, so I thought that would be OK since the entire rest of the necklace is 100% Jobi (at least to my knowledge)!

The challenges really force me to create something "outside the box" so I hope to do many more in the future.

Let me know what you think!


Sunday, June 12, 2011

Detail on the finished Tolkien LOTR piece...


Here is the finished "40th birthday challenge" piece.  My friend Fiona and I made this challenge to one another last year, and since our birthdays are both in the coming 6 days, and since this week was Bead Show, we unveiled our work. It took about 6 months start to finish, with lots of other projects interceding.  It also went through many re-designs, mostly which gave me excuses to buy more beads.

The challenge was to create a concept piece using all of our bead-weaving (tiny beads stitched together with needle and thread) skills, designed (with help from books and mags for elements) by ourselves, that would pay "homage" to an author or film director.  I chose Tolkien, specifically LOTR. 

We got loads of attention walking around Bead Show wearing our creations, which was super gratifying. People loved the spiderweb and the Great Eye.  It did make shopping harder, as people kept stopping to chat and take our picture. A few vendors even guessed (with some hints) the inspiration for the piece, and many people asked us what class we took to make them!  I was proud to say that this one, there is no class for this sort of tomfoolery, at least not yet.

  

From the East. you can see the Elanor flower really well, but I am afraid my leaf of Lothlorien got a little hidden in the end.  The Evenstar hangs down from Samwise's favored flower.

 From the West, you get a good look at Shelob and her web, and hanging down from that the Elassar, which was needed when Aragorn had to heal so many wounded after battle!  You can also get a good look at the Eye of Sauron, which owes a great deal to Diane Fitzgerald's Shaped Beadwork, but which has a free-netted black pupil holding in a black rivoli in a peyote bezel.


Detail of the leaf... my own design, mostly herringbone stitch with some embellishment.

Detail of Shelob, whose legs were a bit wonky.  I did not want to use wire, but if I had, they would have stood a tad more, well, standy.  He is made from two adjacent "plum blossoms" (30 bead spheres) with one fat red bead in her belly to make her look more angry and less cute.  She has 8 red eyes and two little tusks made from size 15 crystal charlottes, so they are almost invisible here.

The One Ring.  Just some embellished cubic right angle weave.  I wanted something that looked old, and heavy, and with enough gaps that one could imagine a message there that only flame could tell...

The Elassar, also owes a lot to Diane.  In Tolkien's description it is set in silver with an eagle behind it, but it was also described as being set in Aragorn's helm.

 

The base of the piece is a 4-unit lattice, which I learned from a Cynthia Rutledge pattern.  

 

Making the eye.

While this might be the bit of the piece that to the naked eye is least easily associated with LOTR, this Elanor flower was based on a flower I have always had in my imagination from reading the books.  I based it on Tolkien's own words describing it, and some fan art. 

Well, on to next year's challenge!!!  I learned a lot with this one, it is the first I have ever designed really thoughtfully from start to finished, all by myself.  Also, I pushed myself to pick up new skills in the making. 

Assembly took almost 8 hours, all this Thursday. (Assembly means stitching all the bits and pieces I've spent 6 months making onto the base.)  It was a huge challenge to put it all together with some balance and not be as literal as I had originally intended (moving, map-wise, from West to East with all the items being in their real locale.  Can you say "geek"?