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Bead Embroidery

Bead Journal Project…August’s Sturgeon Moon

Friday, September 28th, 2007

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Sturgeon Moon

Once more, I spent this month working on the moon for last month! It’s not that I’m behind…I decided in the beginning to work on the month that has just passed, hoping to gather more inspiration while I’m experiencing it! You can find links to more of the Bead Journal Project’s participants on Robin Atkin’s blog.

You can also click on “Bead Journal Project” under “categories” in the right-hand sidebar (of my blog, that is!) to see the past three months’ beaded journal pages.

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Kaleidoscope quilt

Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

I finished the mixed media beaded quilt that began as a class that I took with Nancy Eha back in August. The beaded medallion is so distinctive that it took me awhile to figure out how to finish the piece off.  You can learn to make this great medallion in Nancy’s book, Bead Creative Art Quilts.

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Bead Journal Project…July’s Thunder Moon

Friday, August 24th, 2007

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You can find links to more of the Bead Journal Project’s participants on Robin Atkin’s blog.

Click on “Bead Journal Project” under “categories” in the right-hand sidebar to see the beaded journal pages I’ve done for previous months.

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Betsy Youngquist’s beaded friends

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

There’s a lot to love on Betsy Youngquist’s gallery site! I really love her older beaded paintings, but it’s her beaded objects like the ones below that totally blow me away! Not surprisingly, Betsy’s work has been featured in many books and beadwork magazines.

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Little Moon

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Sister Loon

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Call for entries: Altered Couture

Thursday, August 16th, 2007

Altered Couture (Newsstand Date: February 2008)
A hand-me-down sweater … a raggedy old skirt from the thrift store … a plain T-shirt … Using just a few tools coupled with your creativity, all of these items can be transformed into fantastic works of wearable art! The publisher of Belle Armoire and Somerset Studio invites you to submit your own altered and embellished clothing and accessories to be considered for the third volume of this exciting publication. Chapters will include Skirts & Dresses, Pants & Overalls, Jackets & Vests, Shirts & Tops, Children’s Wear, Sassy Shoes, and Accessories.

Deadline for artwork to be received: Sept 15, 2007. Please read submission guidelines before sending your submissions to: Stampington & Company · C/O: Altered Couture · 22992 Mill Creek, Suite B · Laguna Hills, CA 92653

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Taking a class with Nancy Eha

Friday, August 10th, 2007

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Jungle Rhythm

I had the time of my life last Saturday! I was fortunate enough to be able to take a class in a nearby city with one of my beading heroes, the incomparable beaded quilt artist, Nancy Eha. Not only is Nancy’s beadwork original, beautiful, charming, and totally unique, but so is she. I have rarely been in a classroom with such a gifted teacher. Nancy is patient, organized, articulate, and creative. Very often you’ll get a teacher with one or two of these qualities, but rarely ever all of them. If you ever have an opportunity to take one of her classes…DO NOT MISS OUT!!!

Here are some pictures from our class, and above is one of Nancy’s pieces that was displayed at the quilt show where the classes were being held.

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Here’s my finished piece

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Nancy Eha

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My friend, Debbie

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The project that Nancy was teaching is available in her book, Bead Creative Art Quilts. Can you teach yourself using this book? Of course. Will you have anywhere near the fun or learn as much? No way! So do both: get the book and take a class!

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Artist Profile: Tina Koyama

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

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Transformer 2 bracelet
Photographer: Greg Mullin


Artist: Tina Koyama
Location: Seattle

Website & Blog: Tina Koyama
e-mail: tina@tinakoyama.com

Tina, your work is obviously very organic. How do you describe it?
My current focus is on self-supported sculptures using off-loom beadweaving stitches. My work is probably most closely related to contemporary basketry: 3-dimensional forms made from flexible materials. I like to keep an open mind about what constitutes a “bead” (technically, anything that has a hole going through it!). I have a series of sculptures made from pasta, which, as anyone who has strung a macaroni necklace knows, makes excellent beads!

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No. 5 in the Semolina
Photographer: Greg Mullin


What is your creative process like?
My creative process is completely improvisational and intuitive. I never plan or sketch anything – I simply choose some beads, thread a needle and plunge into it. That improvisational process is both the fuel and the outcome of my work. I am as compelled by the challenge of continually asking, “What happens if…?” as I am by the eventual answer, which always surprises me. Ultimately, it is that surprise that motivates me to continue exploring in a way that implementing a planned design never would.

I always listen to music while I’m beading, and my favorite is the improvisational jazz piano of Keith Jarrett. I can listen to one of his CDs a hundred times and always hear something new – some tiny nuance I missed previously. I’m completely inspired by his apparent fearlessness in appearing in concert before thousands of people to play music he has never played before. My artistic goal is to be the Keith Jarrett of beadwork!

As far as my work habits go, that’s where my background in writing (see below) comes in handy. I get up every weekday morning at 5 a.m. and bead for a couple of hours before going to work at my various day jobs (when I was a writer, I wrote every morning before work – different medium, same habit). On my days off, I bead for 4-5 hours in the morning. It’s not really about looking for or waiting for inspiration – it’s about showing up every day and being there when inspiration arrives. Sometimes it arrives, and sometimes it doesn’t, but either way, I get a lot of beading done (almost 1,000 hours a year).

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Soft & Stone
Photographer: Greg Mullin


What kind of training did you have which helped you achieve your current level of artistry?
I have a B.A. and M.A. in creative writing, and before 2002, most of my creative and professional work was in writing (I did corporate communications for 20+ years before I discovered beads). Until 2007 when I earned a certificate in fiber arts from the University of Washington’s Extension Program, I had no formal education in art.

I began beading probably the way many beaders begin: I made a few earrings and strung a few necklaces, but that type of beading didn’t interest me for long. After a while, I got bored, and I almost gave up beads entirely – until I discovered seed beads in 2002. That’s when I realized the amazing potential of beads – the ability to create complex, 3-dimensional shapes simply by pulling thread tightly through them. The book The New Beadwork (Kathlyn Moss and Alice Scherer) changed my life because I suddenly saw that beads could be used for artistic expression in many ways, not just as jewelry. It really opened my mind to the possibilities.

As far as my beading education goes, early on I used books to learn basic stitches, and I’ve taken numerous classes at local bead shops and bead shows. Even though I’ve been teaching since 2003, I still enjoy taking classes myself, because everyone has a different way of doing things, and there’s always something new to learn. I also enjoy the social aspect of classes.

I’d have to say, though, that my primary training is and always has been simply experimenting continually. I have several shoe-box-size boxes filled with tiny pieces of beadwork (maybe ½ to 2 inches wide) that I have made to explore a stitch or technique. I’d say those boxes are equivalent to a painter’s sketchbook.

Is there a tool or material that you can’t imagine living without?
You mean other than beads?  Three things: Beading glasses; full-spectrum task light; triangle-shaped scoop. I am always on a quest to find the ideal beading thread, which, as far as I’m concerned, hasn’t been developed yet!

What inspires you to create?
Curiosity is probably my primary inspiration. I’m always wondering what would happen if I tried doing something different. Beads themselves (the various shapes and sizes) are also a strong source of inspiration because they can come together in surprising ways, depending on the light, finish, color, stitch used, tension, whatever. The continual discovery keeps me motivated.

What inspires you to keep going when the work gets frustrating or tough?
If I run into a frustrating problem, I usually just “bead through it” and keep going until I find a solution. I’m kind of persistent that way. Sometimes I’ll put the problem down and start working on something else for a while, and often that frees my mind enough to go back to the first problem and find a new solution.

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Transformer 1 necklace
Photographer: Greg Mullin


What is your best piece of advice for those who would like to rise in their level of artistry?
One of my goals as a beadwork instructor is to help students overcome the fear of working without instructions and discover the joy of working improvisationally. My encouragement is to continually experiment with whatever stitch or techniques you know and go beyond what you have learned. If you take a class or read a magazine article to make a piece of jewelry, take it a step further by changing the design in some way. Another tip is not to feel compelled to always complete something as planned. For example, if you start out to make a bracelet but find that the design is changing in some way that is no longer appropriate for a bracelet, let the bracelet go and follow the beadwork. Even if you end up with a piece of beadwork that can’t be worn in any way, you will have learned more from it than if you had simply made another bracelet according to plan.

[editor's note: Tina teaches nationally at bead shows, bead societies and other venues and also sell kits for many of her class projects. For information on kits and classes, please visit her web site and see the "classes" section!]

What takes up the majority of your time besides your art?
I have several “day jobs”: freelance writing (feature articles for magazines and marketing writing), teaching beadwork locally and nationally, and customer service for an online bead shop.

What’s your favorite activity besides beading?
Knitting! In the evening when the creative side of my brain is tired and lazy (I do my best creative work in the morning), I like to knit, which engages my hands and a different part of my brain but still feels constructive. At night, knitting calms me so that I can get to sleep (whereas beading would rev me up). I also like to take knitting with me to the doctor’s office to fill the time while I’m waiting, and I like to take it with me on planes, too. (I also love freeform knitting and crochet! But that’s creative and isn’t the same as comfort knitting.)

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Bead Journal Project…June’s Strawberry Moon

Friday, July 27th, 2007

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Strawberry Moon

True to form, I did June’s page this month! I just don’t like to work on the current month…I have to think about what the previous month was like in order to really come up with imagery that suits both the name of the moon and my own quirks! You can find links to more of the Bead Journal Project’s participants on Robin Atkin’s blog.

Click on “Bead Journal Project” under “categories” in the right-hand sidebar to see last month’s beaded journal page.

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The Beaded Bag online catalog

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

Interweave Press has posted the neatest little online catalog of the beaded bags accepted into Beadwork Magazine’s juried show. You can click on the bottom corners to turn the pages…it’s so cool, it’s almost as good as leafing through the catalog by hand!

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Call for entries: All Dolled Up

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

The Land of Odds has another contest running, with a deadline of August 31, 2007! It’s the 3rd annual All Dolled Up competition, and unlike the Ugly Necklace contest, you’re actually allowed to make your dolls beautiful…the theme this year is Celestial Reflections. Here’s an example of a beauty from last year:

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Light of My Life, by Lidija Fairbanks

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It wasn’t easy to make Queasy!

Monday, July 2nd, 2007

I’m still not posting a picture of my revolting ugly necklace here on the blog. The Land of Odd’s contest for the ugliest necklace is almost over, and I thought I would explain how I came to make this piece. You can see it here: Queasy It’s #9, near the bottom.

During the planning process, I kept thinking through all the different ways that rules of good design could be broken. It actually took me a lot more time to think through the whole piece than it did to make it. It’s just not that easy to make something that you know is hideous! Here are the major design elements and principles that I violated:

  • The shape and texture are hideous: fake vomit is visually disturbing
  • The color scheme uses a poisonous-looking triad in non-harmonious proportions with poor saturation choices: orange, lime green, purple-brown
  • The value contrast is unexciting: all medium value colors were chosen
  • The sizes and shapes are inappropriate and poorly proportioned, used with no balance in the rhythm and repetition of elements: neckstrap too thin for central pendant, wired bead links uneven lengths, wrapped loops uneven sizes, beads allowed to slide freely with no spacers, bead holes too large for wire gauge
  • The choice of materials is inexplicable: cheap plastic mixed with lampworked glass, closure a mix of fibers and a geometric shape atop a chain neckstrap and “organic” shaped vomit, fringe fibers wired onto the chain, all giving the piece no sense of harmony or unity
  • The pattern on the lampwork beads is poorly done: random numbers of eyes, one bead with reverse colors
  • The gradation is unbalanced and backwards: neckstrap beads graduated the wrong way, unequal amounts of fringe on either side of centerpiece
  • The overall effect of all these violations in Queasy is a piece that has no harmony or unity among its elements. There is no sense that this piece is a cohesive whole, with all elements integrated to express a meaningfully complete thought, unless that thought happens to be dis-unity!

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    The Bead Journal Project

    Friday, June 29th, 2007

    Is there any beader out there who has not heard about this project yet? If so, bookmark this site, and make sure that you get in on it next year (I am counting on this becoming an on-going event!). I was fortunate enough to be invited to participate before it was too late. Robin Atkins, beader extraordinaire, has modeled this project on the Quilt Journal Project that many are already familiar with. The blog homepage for the project is the 2007 Bead Journal Project. From the blog site:

    About the 2007 Bead Journal Project
    We are 239 women and 1 man who are dedicated and committed to creating 12 bead journal pages, one per month, for a year, starting June 1, 2007. We live in 13 different countries, including 37 states in the USA. Our primary goal during this process, is to stretch our creative and technical limits. The BJP is all about visual journaling using any media and techniques, as long as it includes beading. We are free to structure our bead journal pages any way we want, as long as all 12 are the same size.

    I have chosen to do the names of the moon for each month. Researching this, I found that there were many alternate names for each month’s full moon, so I put together a list of the names I liked the best. I also decided to do the moon for the previous month each time. I’m not sure why…probably just because I really wanted to start with May, which is the “Flower Moon”. So here is my offering for June:

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    In July, I’ll be doing the “Strawberry Moon” for June!

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    Jewelry Crafts articles for July/August issue

    Wednesday, June 27th, 2007

    Two of my articles appear in the current issue of Jewelry Crafts Magazine. They are both, not surprisingly, projects that are geared towards summer. One is a bead embroidered pendant called Mermaid’s Treasure:

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    The other project uses beads by my friend Jeanne Kent of New Terra Artifacts, and surrounds them with a bit of embroidery and a bit of wire work. It’s name is Blue Rainbow (not very original, huh?):

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    A new project for Belle Armoire magazine

    Friday, June 22nd, 2007

    A couple of weeks ago, I sent a jpeg file to the Michelle, the editor of Belle Armoire magazine, to ask if they might be interested in an article on the techniques involved in making such a piece. She replied that although the techniques were of interest, the necklace itself was just too much of a monstrosity! She didn’t actually use that word…I did! Because it is a totally over-the-top piece, which I shared with you when I finished it. You can see it here if you’d like.

    Anyway, Michelle said that if I wanted to make a scaled down version of the piece, they would love to have the article! We also discussed me making a few more smaller pieces like pins to further illustrate the possibilities with the particular technique. Of course, I’m not going to tell you right now what that technique is…you’ll just have to get a copy of Belle Armoire when it comes out! But here’s a sneak peak at the centerpiece of the new project:

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    Chablis

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    Bead Journal Project…WIP

    Thursday, June 21st, 2007

    Have you heard about the 2007 Bead Journal Project? It’s a group effort started by Robin Atkins, and I’m excited to be taking part in it. All I want to show you today is a little tiny corner of the piece that I’m making…more later!

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    About Bead Arts

    Come on a journey through a bead and jewelry wonderland, where no item is considered too strange to use in making something...especially if that item has a hole in it! All types of beads are welcomed and cherished here, and no techniques are off-limits. You'll be amazed and inspired by the beadwork that is being done today!

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