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Senin, 18 Juli 2011

Fit To Print -- "Spotlight on Wire" by Melissa Cable


When I was recently at the Bead & Button Show, I snagged this recently-released book my Melissa Cable.  As the title indicates, the book shows how to twist, fold, hammer, weave, and wrap metal and wire.  The cover project immediately caught my eye, and a quick flip through the book showed a number of other projects that were beyond beginner level.  Don't get me wrong -- a beginner will both learn and be able to accomplish many projects in this book, but there are plenty of projects for more advanced wire-lovers.

The chapters are broken down into styles of wire:

1:  Woven Wire
2:  Textured Strip Wire
3:  Corrugated Wire
4:  Heavy Wire
5:  Chain and Wire

The tips and techniques pages explain how to do interesting things with wire and strip metal -- texturing, using a "poor man's rolling mill" (something I found really cool), and patinating.  There are plenty of step-by-step photos, too.
If you aren't used to working with wire, dealing with the many different gauges and lengths of wire in each project might be a little confusing at first -- lots of numbers to deal with in some projects.  However, if you're new to wire, start with the simpler projects first and you'll get the hang of it quickly.  The font is also a little small, but the projects are worth it.
I'm looking forward to trying out some of the projects in this book in a challenge with my friend soon.  Stay tuned for that!
Lori Anderson writes the blog Pretty Things and creates jewelry for her web site, Lori Anderson Designs.   She is also the creator of the Bead Soup Blog Party.   

Selasa, 14 Juni 2011

These Are a Few of My Favorite Beads

No matter if your day is happy or sad, beads will make you smile!  Here are few of my current favorites...


polymer clay cat bead by Tree Wings Studio

boro lampwork beads by Firelily

polymer clay beads by Earth Tones


lampwork beads by Lori Lochner


porcelain owl by Joan Miller



Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site, Lori Anderson Designs, and wrote the blog An Artist's Year Off.    She is also the creator of the Bead Soup Blog Party.  

Selasa, 07 Juni 2011

Interview with Polymer Clay Artist Barbara Bechtel


Barbara Bechtel was one of the first polymer clay artists I fell in love with on Etsy.  I continue to love and use her beads and she always comes out with new and innovative pieces.  I thought I'd interview her today so you could get to know her, too! 

L:  Barbara, how did you get started? 

B:  I started making beads after becoming disenchanted with the mixed media work I was making. I've always been a tinkerer, a Jane-of-all trades. One day while I was tinkering in my studio, I came upon some polymer clay in my supplies and decided to see what I could make. I was immediately smitten and have been making beads ever since.




L:  What inspires you? 

B:  I am keenly inspired by nature. For many years, my paintings were narrative in nature. I also have a deep interest in history and anthropology. Historical artifacts and relics all influence my work.  I seek to translate these forms into a new and fresh perspective....I also love the marriage of images and words.




L:  What are your favorite colors to work with?

B:   I don't know that I have favorites but I am definitely drawn to blues. Color is such a magnanimous thing, it has the ability to transcend the shape it is confined to.


L:  What is your favorite time of day to work?  What does an average day look like?

B:  I work best in the early morning. My workspace is pretty small, so I usually try to focus all of my efforts on one task that day, whether it is making beads, finishing them or working on finished jewelry. I'm very much a recluse. I don't leave the house that much. I work intuitively, so when I go into my studio, I work on the thing I feel most drawn to that day. 

The afternoon and evening are usually reserved for more tedious tasks...but I find that when I'm doing those tasks, I get the beginning visions for new projects. I spend an inordinate amount of time in deliberation about these ideas, so that when I physically begin them, I only have to work out the physical details.





L:  When did you begin making beads, and did you make jewelry first or beads first?

B:  That's a hard question because I made jewelry first in some basic jewelry classes. I never connected the two until I made those first polymer clay beads. Those first beads smacked of the same work I had done in my jewelry work and so, the two have become linked.



L:  Is there an artist that inspires you? 


B:  I love seeing the working process of artists. What goes on in an artist's mind an life and how that is translated when they begin to work. I recently watched the documentary series, Art City, and that really resonated with me. 


I think a constant for me has been Nina Bagley because I was first drawn to her mixed media work as a mixed media painter myself. Stephanie Lee's work is also very inspiring to me for a similar reason. The work my customers make with my beads always thrills me because they often use the beads in completely different ways than I could ever imagine and that is really inspiring to me as well.


 
L:  Do you have an art background?

B:  I have a BFA in painting from the Savannah College of Art and Design. I really loved that experience but I don't think it's necessary for everyone. I don't believe that one needs a piece of paper to make things. I think a person makes things because they can't imagine not making them.  If someone wants to make something, they should just do that.

L:  What is your artistic outlook on life?

 B:  I don't know that it is an outlook....but I try to follow my heart. To do the best I can, however I can.


L:  What do you like about your work?

B: I like that my work has remained true...I think it has always been a reflection of myself....a documentary, if you will. I can look back at both the good work and the bad work, and I can see what was going on in my life at the time.



L:  What is the best piece of advice you’ve been given? 

B:  Work hard, stay honest, be critical. Keep your eye on the ball, even when you can't see the ball. Make sure the process of making brings you joy. Never allow negative attitudes to control your own thoughts.

L:  What could you not do without?

B:  The love of my family and friends.


L:  If you weren’t a bead and jewelry artist, what would you be? 

B:  I would still be a maker, of some sort. I love food, so I've always liked the idea of being a chef...and I still love to paint. I would like to someday return to making larger paintings.



L:  What is your dream project?

B:  To build and design my own home and working studio. That would be amazing.

You can visit Barbara at the following sites: 


jewelry and beads: http://floridity.etsy.com

vintage and paper goods: http://kitofparts.etsy.com



Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site, Lori Anderson Designs, and wrote the blog An Artist's Year Off.    She is also the creator of the Bead Soup Blog Party.  

Selasa, 24 Mei 2011

If I'd Only Known -- Some Tips for New Beaders

I've mentioned in the past that I got into the jewelry design business completely and totally by accident.  I didn’t take a class, just jumped in with both feet and started messing around and figuring things out for myself.

Almost immediately, my hobby turned into a business.  Looking back, there are so many things I wish I’d known:

1)  Beads will take over your life.

Do not fight this.  So from the start, get a huge storage system in place.  It will be full sooner than you know.  The quicker you allocate studio space (even if it's a corner in your basement!), the quicker you’ll be able to find things when you need them — and you'll know what you have so you don’t keep buying the same supply over and over again!



2)  Take some classes early on.

I don’t know how long it was before I learned how to make a perfect wrapped loop, but at first, I had no idea how.  And it showed.

I now allow myself to make all sorts of mistakes while I'm learning a technique....


...but when it comes to selling something, I'm very, very particular about how something is constructed.


3)  Explore different mediums.

Right now, I’m a stringing/wire work jewelry designer.  I know traditional metalsmithing and lampwork bead making, but I’ve gotten so involved with keeping inventory up for the shows I do that I don’t have much time to look into other things, or hone new skills.  If I’d started exploring new mediums sooner, who knows what I’d be making now … altered art?  Woven wire?  PMC?.  It also would have helped me figure out what direction I wanted to go with my jewelry — what did I want my primary market to be?  I didn’t allow myself enough experimentation time before starting to sell.


4)  If you’re going to sell your work, use the best beads you can afford.

I should have been pickier when I first started selling my work.  I cringe now at what I was using.  This doesn’t mean you have to start with AAA London Blue Topaz, but if you’re going to be serious about selling, be serious about your beads.  There are LOTS of wonderful art beads out there that will run circles around the run-of-the-mill beads you'll see in craft stores.

Suburban Girl Beads
 5)  Get a handle on your pricing structure right away.


I quickly learned that my retail prices weren’t going to support a wholesale business.  I also learned that because I started with such cheap beads, it was a little difficult for my customers to get used to prices once I discovered beauties like handmade glass.  (Another good reason to make sure you’re happy with your style before you start selling it!)  Do some research by hitting the craft shows -- what is the price range that seems to be selling?  Additionally, try to decide right away if you’re going after the wholesale or retail market.  Each one has its own peculiarities, and it’s often a good idea to choose one or the other.
I feel pretty lucky that seven years later, things have turned out as well as they have.  But it sure would have made a difference if I knew then what I know now.

What are some things YOU wish you'd known then?


Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site, Lori Anderson Designs, and wrote the blog An Artist's Year Off.    She is also the creator of the Bead Soup Blog Party. 

Rabu, 27 April 2011

Fit to Print Review -- Jewelry Upcycled! by Sherri and Michelle Haab



I love books by Sherri Haab.  Not only are they sure to have innovative tutorials, but they're a treat for the eyes.  This book is no exception!

The book, "Jewelry Upcycled!", features techniques and tutorials for "reusing metal, plastic, glass, fiber, and found objects".   The tutorials are broken down into five "upcycling" sections:
  • Metal and Wire
  • Plastic
  • Glass and Ceramics
  • Fabric and Leather
  • Found Objects
There really is something for everybody in this book.  You'll learn how to rivet, use resin, felt old sweaters, solder with copper tape -- there really is a LOT between these pages.  

And if you think that using recyclable materials means the jewelry won't look like.. well, jewelry, take a look at Sherri's bubble wrap necklace:


Isn't that cool?  

The book is 144 pages and is put out by Potter Craft.  I'd highly recommend it to anyone looking to expand their jewelry-making horizons and go green!


Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site, Lori Anderson Designs, and wrote the blog An Artist's Year Off.    She is also the creator of the Bead Soup Blog Party. 

Kamis, 10 Maret 2011

Recycled Bowling Balls as Beads

My friend Matt Cole has long made the silver beads that I use in my jewelry creations.  His silver bead company, IndoExpo, creates my favorite beads and clasps, hand down.

He now lives in the Midwest with his wife and little boy and has been designing sterling silver beads and jewelry for years.

Matt Cole Jewelry made from Recycled Bowling Balls matt-cole.com
Matt has now taken his life-long love of bowling to a new level — creating a unique line of jewelry with discarded bowling balls that would ordinarily be destined for a land fill. How cool is that?

Bowling Ball  Bracelet
Bowling Ball Bracelet

I love that he’s making beautiful beads out of a recycled material, and an unusual one at that. I also love his attention to detail. I love how some of his recycled bowling ball jewelry looks like miniature bowling balls!  Imagine showing up on league night with these dangling from your ears! You'd think they'd be heavy, but once cut down to bead size, they're incredibly lightweight.

Bowling Ball Earrings

You can visit Matt Cole’s recycled bowling ball jewelry site by clicking http://www.matt-cole.com/.  Tell him Lori sent you, and that she said the jewelry would “bowl you over”!

(Ha ha — see what I did there?)  

Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site lorianderson.netShe writes the blogs Pretty Things and An Artist's Year Off.  She lives in Maryland. 

Senin, 21 Februari 2011

This Week's Featured Designer - Kiwiken

Each Monday the Art Bead Scene features a Designer of the Week. I'm thrilled to pick my favorite from the Monthly Challenge entries. Each person participating in this month's challenge is creating a piece based upon this photo by John Singer Sargent.


My choice this week is a gorgeous necklace by Kiwiken.


From her blog, she states:

"[The painting] ... It’s so… soft. Sweet. Girly. Romantic. And I just don’t have a hand for that stuff. But, I had to try. So I got some pinks and purples and a nice dark green, and sat down to make some “hidden magic”.  It was my first serious attempt at this technique."

I think she nailed it.  I love the romanticism of the necklace, with the little bit of complexity the polymer clay brings to the picture.  The flowers pick up upon the paintings motif without overdoing it.  What can I say?  I just love this necklace.
You can visit her blog by clicking here and her store by clicking here.

Want to see your work here next week?  Enter our monthly challenge for a chance to be featured!

Lori Anderson is a full-time jewelry designer residing in Maryland.  She writes the blog Pretty Things, and you can see her work at Lori Anderson Designs.

Jumat, 18 Februari 2011

Fit To Print -- Wire Style 2


I'm absolutely THRILLED to be reviewing this book for you today!  I received a copy last week (it's available to everyone on March 1st) and I immediately devoured it.  

There are various levels of wire work in the book, and with 45 designs to choose from, you'll find something to love.  Earrings, bracelets, and necklaces are all made with a variety of metals and materials.  Not only will you love the tutorials, but you'll love discovering new bead artists in polymer clay, lampwork glass, and ceramic.  

Learn how to make this necklace in the book! Designer, Cindy Wimmer. Art Beads, Kerry Bogert.

The book also comes with a one-hour instructional DVD -- excellent for those that like to see someone making things in addition to reading instructions.  Even if you don't watch the DVD, you'll find tutorials easy to follow, and they'll provide jewelry designers with a great jumping-off point for creating their own unique designs.

Along with author Denise Peck, the contributors to Wire Style 2 offer their own unique style. (The contributors are Kerry Bogert, Jodi Bombardier, Jane Dickerson, Lorelei Eurto, Connie Fox, Lisa Niven Kelly, Donna Spadafore, and Cindy Wimmer.)


My recommendation?  Run, don't walk, to grab this book as soon as it hits the stands March 1st.  It's an inspiring jewelry design book you won't want to miss.

Lori Anderson is a full-time jewelry designer residing in Maryland.  She writes the blog Pretty Things, and you can see her work at Lori Anderson Designs.

Rabu, 16 Februari 2011

Being an Entrepreneur -- the Work-at-Home Edition

If you've ever wondered what it's like being a work-at-home entrepreneur, well, let me tell you. It's a lot more than simply shambling down the stairs in your pajamas with a cup of coffee and an endless day of joyful creating ahead of you.

If only.



Yesterday my plan was to spend all day tackling my To-Do list, which consisted mainly of updating my web site, making some jewelry for an upcoming show, and ordering some new booth displays.

However, the day ran like this:


1) Oversleep. I have an excuse. I was up until 2am the night before working.


2) Due to oversleeping, missed my window of good light for photographing new jewelry for the web site.


3) Make coffee. Leave coffee on the counter when the dryer dings. Forget I made coffee.


4) Sit down at the computer to order the booth displays. Remember I have to stick postcard stamps on a 10" stack of cards for the craft show.

5) Remember coffee. It's cold. Make it again.

6) Run upstairs to put on real clothes as Zack has just been invited to go play kick ball. Watch for a moment and remember why I hated grade school gym


7) Where the heck is that danged coffee.


8) Sit back down at the computer. My order for booth displays has timed out and I have to find everything all over again.  
9)  I check email and see I have three orders that need to be sent TODAY. Stop everything to pull orders, wrap, pack, and stamp.  Yell to whomever will listen to turn the television DOWN.
Beads by The Gritty Bird

10.) Say a Very Bad Word. It involves lack of coffee.

11) Open computer programs to work on web site. Notice that it is now 7:30pm.


12) Upload exactly two (2) pieces of jewelry before it's time to read to Zack.


13) Finally drink my coffee. It's 9pm.


14) Everyone goes to bed, and thanks to coffee, I am up until 4am making jewelry.



Woody Allen was right. "If you want to make God laugh, tell Him your plans."



When Lori isn't searching for a Venti Starbucks Mocha, she's (trying) to create jewelry in her Easton, MD studio. She writes a blog, Pretty Things, and you can see her work at http://www.lorianderson.net/.

Jumat, 14 Januari 2011

The Winner of the Sunshine Artist Magazine is.....

The winner of the issue of the latest issue of Sunshine Artist is....


Congratulations, Shelby!


If you weren't a winner, Sunshine Artist is currently, for a limited time, running a special -- four print issues absolutely free!  Just click here to take you to the special.

They also offer several options and price points -- receiving an actual print magazine or the cheaper option of reading the full magazine online.  Click here for more info.  You can start out with the four free issues, see if it's for you, and then go from there!

Congratulations, Shelby, and I hope you all take advantage of the offer.... but hurry, it can end at any time!



Lori Anderson creates jewelry for her web site lorianderson.netShe writes the blog Pretty Things and chronicled her artistic New Year's resolutions for 2010 at  An Artist's Year Off.  She lives in Maryland.

Selasa, 11 Januari 2011

The High Cost of Silver

Today sterling silver is over $30 an ounce.

You can almost hear the tears and gnashing of teeth of jewelry designers everywhere.

If none of this really means anything, if it's the first you've heard of it, allow me to put it into perspective for you. 

These are six beads I bought a week ago, wholesale.  The largest is 20mm tall.

They cost me $27.  Wholesale.

Two years ago, the beads below, also wholesale, cost me $400.  Then, I was shaking my head and half-numb at the cost of $15/ounce.  Now?  They'd cost me double.


Many of my bracelets have four to five silver beads and a large silver toggle in the mix, so doing the math .....yikes.  What are designers who use primarily sterling silver to do?  Customers traditionally don't like change, and switching to plated silver or another metal doesn't always work.

The ten year silver price chart.  
You can keep track of the silver price at www.kitcosilver.com


Why is it so high?

Some say it started when China launched precious metal futures trading in January 2008. Some say it's due to silver riding the coat tails of gold's meteoric rise to over $1000/ounce. And of course historically, precious metals go up when the dollar is down.

So what does this mean for jewelry designers?

It means we're going to have to work even harder to create unique things. Let's take this financial hit on our supplies as an opportunity to push ourselves creatively.  We can continue to use sterling silver, but perhaps less of it.  Instead, we can start looking at beads we may never have considered before.

bracelet with ceramic, wood, and lampwork glass, sterling silver wire and toggle, linked with steel rings
In some of my jewelry, instead of using the four or five silver beads I used to, I choose a pretty toggle, ONE sterling silver bead, and make the rest of the bracelet REALLY count.  The toggle is as important as the beads I choose, and focusing on it as part of the whole, making sure it blends with the entire design, is even more important now.

bracelet made with lampwork glass, ceramic, and one large Thai silver bead
While my customers have been slow to accept copper and brass (which pains me, as there are so. very. many. gorgeous options out there), I've found that by mixing it in slowly with my usual style, it's started to be picked up more often.  If you're meeting resistance to switching metals, adding things in slowly while continuing to use your regular elements (lampwork glass, polymer clay, ceramic) might be a good way to introduce these versatile, beautiful options.

bracelet made with lampwork glass, polymer clay, and copper
Two years ago, I thought, "Surely this can't last!"  And yet here we are.  In 1980, sterling silver rose to an all-time high of $49.45 an ounce.  I certainly hope we're not headed there.  HOWEVER -- I do believe that we as designers are creative enough and resourceful enough to make the most of this.  We can not only educate our buyers as to why certain pieces now cost more, but can attract customers with our new-found creativity born of necessity.  

Bronze Metal Clay pendant, brass chain, and Czech glass

So look at this high rise in sterling silver cost as a challenge to you to work outside your comfort zone.  Look at your beads in an entirely new way.  Discover new metals.  Investigate steel, pewter, and aluminum for a silver color, and view copper and brass with a new eye.  Look at your toggles and clasps not merely as a way to close a piece, but as an integral part of your design.

How have you been dealing with the high rise in the cost of sterling silver?

Jumat, 07 Januari 2011

Fit to Print -- Sunshine Artist Magazine and GIVEAWAY

11/For those of you looking to get into the juried craft show circuit, Sunshine Artist magazine will prove invaluable.


Sunshine Artist serves several purposes -- providing the reader with relevant articles for the artisan and crafter; spotlighting veteran crafters so readers can learn from their expertise; providing juried show reviews by the artisans, NOT the promoters; and providing listings of upcoming juried shows.

The business articles are timely and helpful, even if you haven't done your first craft show yet.  The current issue covers how to pick the right show by knowing your audience, and how to know what pieces to bring and whether or not to apply.

my booth at an outdoor show
I write for Sunshine Artist, reviewing shows in the areas I exhibit in, but the show reviews aren't limited to its paid reviewers.  Online, any artisan can anonymously rate a show, and in fact, the magazine depends upon these FastAudits.  Once a year, Sunshine Artist compiles their "200 Best" edition, which provides the 200 best shows for both art and craft.  Without the artisans' reviews, this edition wouldn't be accurate or possible.

this year's 200 Best edition


The reviews of shows in Sunshine Artist are important because they cover the shows without the rose-colored glasses of the promoter, but from the experienced eyes of the artisan.  You get the scoop -- from the averages of how much money was made, how difficult load in and out was, how helpful the staff was, and how the crowds were.  Ultimately, you have to make your own decision on whether or not to do a show, but this magazine can help you make that decision.



my husband setting up my show tent
Sunshine Artist isn't available on news stands, so you have to subscribe via their web site.  You can also visit their Facebook page by clicking here.  Keep in mind, the magazine only covers juried shows.

And to one reader, I'm giving away a free issue of the magazine -- just comment below, making sure you have an email address listed so I can get in touch with you!

Giveaway ends 1/14/2011

Selasa, 14 Desember 2010

On the 5th Day of Christmas - Snow in Forest Earrings

Snow in the Forest

2 – 10mm Erinite Swarovski 3700 margarita beads
2 - 8mm Emerald Swarovski 3700 margarita beads
2 – 6mm Peridot 5305 spacer beads
2 - 4mm Siam 5301/5328 bicone beads
2 - sterling silver snowflakes
2 - sterling silver ear wires
2 – 3” pieces of sterling silver 22ga wire

(all beads available at ArtBeads.com)

1. Make a wrapped loop.

2. Stack the Siam bead, then the 6mm, 8mm and 10mm green beads.

3. Make another wrapped loop, capturing the loop in the snowflake charm.

4. Open and close the loop in the ear wire, capturing the loop above the Siam bead.

It's that easy!

Lori Anderson creates jewelry for Lori Anderson Designs and writes the blogs Pretty ThingsAn Artist's Year Off. She lives in Maryland

Note from the Editor: Lori's project would also look awesome using a pair of silver snowflake charms from Hint.

Jumat, 26 November 2010

The Beads of Christmas

♫♪♪♫ I'm dreaming of a White Christmas....

Moonraker Lampwerks

♫♪♪ Just like the ones I used to know...
Where the tree tops glisten....

Humblebeads
♫♪♪♫ and children listen
To hear sleigh bells in the snow.

I'm dreaming of a white Christmas....

Diane Hawkey
♫♪♫♫♪ ... with every Christmas card I write
May your days be merry and bright
And may all your Christmases be white.




Happy Holidays!

Lori Anderson creates jewelry for Lori Anderson Designs and writes the blogs Pretty ThingsAn Artist's Year Off.  She lives in Maryland. and