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Bead Weaving

Glass curtains!!

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

Denise Perreault makes a lot of really neat stuff, and I love the way her website is arranged…it’s really easy to navigate. That way, you can concentrate on all the gorgeous beadwork instead of trying to figure out how to get “the-ah from he-ah”, as we say in New England. The thing that Denise makes that I’ve never seen done before is glass curtains. They are simply beautiful.

Visit Denise and take a look at her beautiful vessels and sculptures too!

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If I Were a Blacksmith by Denise Perreault

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How to make 2-drop peyote beaded beads

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

Technique Tuesday!

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These beads are extremely simple to make, so they’re a great place to start in learning to weave beaded beads. Start with a 24 inch single strand of Nymo 0 on your needle, and two different colors of seed beads, preferably Delicas or some other cylinder-style of seed beads. I used a dark galvanized amethyst and bright gold to match the Tigerskin (or Wood!) Jasper necklace that I showed you yesterday.

In 2-drop peyote, you stitch the same as in regular peyote, except that you pass your thread through 2 beads each time. Check my post on seed bead basics for instructions if you need to. Here’s the pattern for these little beads:

  1. String on 12 beads, alternating colors, two of each color at a time. Start with 2 gold and end with 2 purple. This will be the 1st and 2nd row after you complete the next step. Leave a 5-6 inch of thread.
  2. Weave the following rows in single colors, following this pattern:
    3rd row - gold
    4th row - purple
    5th row - gold
    6th row - purple
    7th row - purple
    8th row - gold
    9th row - purple
    10th row - gold
    11th row - gold
    12th row - purple
    13th row - gold
    14th row - purple
    15th row - purple
    16th row - gold
  3. Wrap the bead into a cylinder so that the “in” and “out” parts mesh. Use the thread still on the needle to weave back and forth, “zipping” the two edges together. At the top, tie the two thread ends together, and work them both back through your work to bury them.

Copyright 2007 Cyndi Lavin. Not to be reprinted, resold, or redistributed for profit. May be printed out for personal use or distributed electronically provided that entire file, including this notice, remains intact.

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Tigerskin stone necklace with beaded beads

Monday, September 3rd, 2007

Make Art Monday!

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I bought this tigerskin jasper at a recent bead and gem show. It’s not tigereye, which has that wonderful chatoyant reflection: instead, tigerskin has matte bands of purple-brown and dark golden ochres. It mixes beautifully with deep bronze facetted glass beads and small beaded beads.

Tomorrow, I’m going to give you the pattern I came up with for the beaded beads. It’s not difficult, and you can choose any colors you like to create the checkerboard pattern.

[Note ~ now I've been told that it's wood jasper, not tigerskin jasper, so you'll have to decide for yourself!]

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“A Charmed Life” is ready for auction

Friday, August 31st, 2007

You’ve probably already read our story, but I’m going to include it again below so that those who are not familiar with it can read it. The time we’ve been waiting for is almost here! “A Charmed Life” will be auctioned off, starting Sunday, September 9 and ending on Saturday, September 15, on eBay. Search for it using the phrase “a charmed life necklace breast cancer”

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Starting in April 2006, a small group of my artist friends and I have been collaborating on a charm necklace project. None of us have ever met in person as we live all over the country, but this project is working towards making us feel closer in so many ways!

All of the charms were sent to me to be assembled, and then the necklace began its journey from one member to the next. Each of us wore it on a special date…everything from art openings and reunions to a concrete convention. We’ve shared our pictures and stories with each other as the necklace has made the rounds. Our ultimate aim, though, is to auction it off this summer and donate all the funds to breast cancer research.

The stories from those who’ve worn the necklace and the reactions of those who see it are quite gratifying. We’ve had people stop us on the street, cross crowded rooms, and even chase us down to get a better look at it. Everyone immediately senses that there must be an amazing story behind it. We’re hoping that our sale will be amazing too: we would really like to make a major contribution to breast cancer research with the auction of our piece. Every one of us in the group has someone we love who has struggled with one form of cancer or another, and many with breast cancer specifically. [Note ~ The necklace will be up for auction on eBay in September 2007. Search on the phrase "a charmed life necklace breast cancer"]

The participants:
Wendy Van Camp
Illaya Brown
Bobbi Chukran
Leah Hitchcock-Ybarra
Dorothy Lueloff
Ellen Chasse
Dulcey Heller
Amy Fraser
Cyndi Lavin

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Melanie Potter’s workshops

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

I’ve never taken a workshop with Melanie, but it’s certainly a big temptation now that I’ve seen the stunning array of pieces that she teaches! You can look over her workshop topics and schedule at her website.

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Confetti Fiber Bracelet by Melanie Potter

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Tutorials on right angle weave

Tuesday, August 21st, 2007

Technique Tuesday!

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Right angle weave is such a useful stitch, and there are so many variations, including single- or double-needle varieties, that it can seem really overwhelming. I’ve found an excellent online source of instructions on Bead Jewelry Making that you might want to take a look at. In fact, I’ve added this excellent website’s tutorial list to our list of the Best of the Basics Online!

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Fire polished facetted beads

Monday, August 20th, 2007

Make Art Monday!

I’ve been having a great time with these Czech facetted beads lately. Many people refer to them as crystals, and although I’ve been known to slip and write that from time to time, they are not really properly called that. True crystals have a high lead content, which gives them a brilliant shine not matched by these beads. Swarovski cut crystals are real crystal. Most Czech beads, at least the ones I know of, are not.

However, I don’t think that the bead police are going to come get you if you use the term wrong. I do think that if you are selling your work, you should definitely try to be as accurate as possible and at least call them Czech crystals so that your customers don’t think they’re getting Swarovski. Oh yes, there is a difference!

Back down off my soapbox now, and off to change all the places in my website descriptions where I used the wrong terms..LOL! Here’s what I made :)

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This is right angle weave around an optical lens. The other side is done with amber colored beads…two for the time it takes to do one!

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This bracelet alternates large facetted beads with 2-holed jasper beads.

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Free jewelry e-courses by Tammy Powley

Tuesday, August 14th, 2007

I recently went to see what all was on Tammy’s updated list of e-courses, and I was amazed by the number of offerings she has! She has divided them into “crash courses” and “slow-and-easy” formats, so you can pick what fits your needs. Do you want to learn more about knotting, metal clay, or business tips? How about macrame, basic stringing, or metal fabrication? It’s all available at Tammy’s About.com jewelry making site!

[tags]tutorials,beading,jewelry-making,beads,wearable-art[/tags}]

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.

transformer1necklace.jpg
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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Tina Koyama’s bead sculptures

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

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Pink (Color Study Series), 2006
Photograph by Greg Mullin


Tina Koyama makes beautiful necklaces and bracelets, but what totally captured my attention was her sculptures! I was just thinking about how organic her work was, when I glanced at this statement on her website:

Beads fascinate me because they can emulate a natural cellular structure. A single strung bead doesn’t hold much interest, but multiplied by thousands, perhaps tens of thousands, beads take on a new form – one that I am continually compelled to explore.

Well, that explains it!

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Rhythm & Blues (Color Study Series), 2006
Photograph by Greg Mullin


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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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Bracelets with geometric precision by Christine Marie Noguere

Monday, July 16th, 2007

Christine’s cuff-style bracelets are actually architectural marvels, created with a precision that defies belief! Using peyote stitch and right-angle weave, she creates works that emphasize form over color. A very different approach to bead weaving and design…and very lovely!

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Artist Profile: Diana Neamtu

Thursday, July 12th, 2007

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Grapes


Artist: Diana Neamtu
Business name: Beaded Flora

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Grapes, detail


Blogs:
Beaded Flora
Ganutell

Diana, how do you describe your work?
I try to take the beauty of flowers and nature and translate them into everlasting beaded works.

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Rose


What is your creative process like?
I tend to focus primarily on duplicating flowers from pattern books. I’ll usually browse through a book and pick out an interesting flower. I then spend some time planning what type and color of beads I want to use. This usually takes the longest time because I want to be sure about my color and texture selections. As for my work environment, I prefer to work with a little background noise (such as the t.v.) for a few hours at a time.

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Pear


What kind of training did you have which helped you achieve your current level of artistry?
I’ve never had any real formal training. I found about beaded flowers by accident while surfing the internet one day. I fell in love with them right away and immediately ordered a book. When it came, though, I was intimidated and it took me several months to finally try to make something. After my first flower, which was terrible of course, I realized how truly enjoyable and realaxing beaded flowers are. I continue to practice this art regularly, and I try to make sure that every flower looks as perfect as possible.

Is there a tool or material that you can’t imagine living without?
Floral tape. That’s the first thing that came to mind.

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Gladiola


What inspires you to create?
Seeing other people’s incredible creations and wanting to recreate that.

What inspires you to keep going when the work gets frustrating or tough?
This is my hobby; it never gets tough or frustrating =)

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Cyclamen


What is your best piece of advice for those who would like to rise in their level of artistry?
Practice as much as possible. For beaded flower artists: don’t be afraid to modify patterns to match your perception of nature.

What takes up the majority of your time besides your art?
Most definitely school (University).

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Mint Flower


What are some of your favorite comfort items?
Food: Chicken soup
Book: The Count of Monte Cristo
Color: Green
Other hobby: Ganutell (Maltese craft made in a similar manner to beaded flowers)

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Sea Holly

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Making a resin bead necklace

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

Technique Tuesday!

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There are several different methods that are popular for creating woven bead necklaces: a figure-8 style of finger weaving, spiralling half-hitch macrame, and flat square-knot macrame. My preferred technique for this necklace uses all three stitches!

  1. 1 Each half of the necklace is woven separately, starting at the ends and working towards the middle. For the loop, I used figure-8 finger weaving, starting in the middle of my cords, and then folded them in half and proceeded with square-knot macrame for an inch or so.
  2. Once I began adding beads, I switched to half-hitches so that the work would spiral around. Beads are added only to the central cords, not to the outside working cords which are used only to do the knotting. It takes a little trial and error to figure out how many knots to add between each bead. For this necklace, I used a 8/0 seed bead to anchor each resin bead in place.
  3. When each half is as long as you desire, switch back to square-knots to make sections long enough to pass through the pendant bail from opposite sides. Knot the cords to keep them from slipping back through, and add more beads to the ends of the cords to finish.

These are not terribly detailed directions, because there are so many variables that must be considered. Also, there is a wonderful book that is available to teach the finger-woven method, which I’ve mentioned before, written by Robin Atkins. My method is highly trial and error, and lots of errors went into figuring out how I wanted to make this particular necklace. The next one will be different, I’m sure! My best piece of advice is to start with a smaller piece like a bracelet, or even just a small sample that you’ll cut apart when you’re done. That way you can figure out how much cord you need based on the tension you keep in knotting and the size beads you use.

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Flamingo Waterfall

Monday, July 9th, 2007

Make-Art Monday!

So what do you call it when the colors remind you of Florida and the shape is reminiscent of a cascading waterfall? Flamingo Waterfall, of course!

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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!

Bead Arts Author(s)
    » Cyndi-Lavin

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