Monday, January 28, 2008

Why we love what we love

It’s easy to see why people love the creations of the EBW team, but why do team members love their art? We asked our members and received something wonderful, thoughtful, revealing answers.

Kim, aka Regalbeads:














Everything about it? It is very relaxing for me. I love the feel of the beads, watching something come together right before my eyes and the satisfaction of a finished piece! I think that my favorite part though is seeing a piece of my work being worn by someone who loves it!


Trish, aka skyesmedicine:
















What do I enjoy most ...

1. The oohs and ahhs from people who say OMG how can you do that, I would go nuts. Nice to be able to do something well that others can't - esp. since I don't sing, dance, paint, play music, etc...
2. I find it relaxing - most people say that is nuts.
3. The sheer joy of saying I made that when a piece is complete. Especially knowing that my technique is on point, tight and true. I have had many folks at the pow wows and festivals comment on how well I do, not bad for a chick who 2 years ago couldn't do a simple loom piece without stabbing every warp thread.


Anna, aka arosebyname:











It's my therapy. I could spend hours and hours just beading. In fact, I would spend all my time playing with beads if I didn't have to earn real money to pay bills. I wish so much that I could earn enough playing with my beads that I didn't have to do anything else, but so far, it's just not happening that way and it's so frustrating!


Ann, aka myfairladyvt4:










What I love about beadweaving in general is that it is repeats, kind of like knitting or crocheting, I can watch TV or whatever while I am doing it, if there are too many changes in the pattern I don't seem to like it as much. It is kind of relaxing for me like therapy. Unless you get a big knot. I also love how there are so many different shapes and sizes of sizes of the seed beads. I can't seem to get enough.


Dawn, aka dawnchastain:











The process of knowing that I can make something work and look good. I love to make things out of junk or include it in my bead work. I am bad about starting a piece to see if I can do it and then not finishing it because it’s not a challenge any longer.


Bev, aka noeasybeads:










My favorite part about beadweaving is designing. Seeing a group of beads together and envisioning what they can become.


Jean, aka totallytwisted:










I just love having a block of time to go into my beading room and just work. To shut out the daily annoyances like the phone, chores, obligations, etc. and play with my beads. I love looking at the
beads, buying them, touching them even reading beading books - it is all part of the beadweaving experience. But I must admit the part I love the best is finishing a piece and thinking this is the best I have made so far - it is awesome and then knowing it is just the beginning and I will make even better pieces down the road because each item you make is a learning experience.


Sarah, aka thebeadedlily:













The same thing that inspires all my beading, the beads themselves. I love the colors, shapes, finishes. I love to form the finished product. I love seeing how one set of beads makes another set gleam. I love that people wonder what the inspiration is when I'm just having a blast with beads. I love that the finished product is beautiful, that it's art.


Melody, aka salamanderhouse:












I love the Zen of it, the total concentration to the exclusion of all else. I love the spilling out of puddles of color, and the fortuitous accidents that always make a piece better than the plan. I love the snapping in of beads in peyote stitch, and the draping of beads in net stitch. I love the contemplation of the stash for the next project. I love the feel of beads under my fingers, and the look of them in different lights.


MaryLou, aka time2cre8:












The thing I love most about beadweaving is the thing that probably drives a lot of people away from it -- repetition. It's so relaxing to sit there with all those tiny beads in front of me, picking them up one by one and adding them to something that winds up resembling "bead fabric." It's applying order to the chaos of a pile of beads, making them sit up tight next to each other. Someday, obsession will take over and I'll wind up creating a tablecloth or something. I wonder how beadwoven wallpaper would look. Hmmm.


Wolf, aka DantesSpirit:










The variety. The various stitches that can be adapted to whatever you want, in so many ways that no two people will do it the same way.


Ivey, aka enso:













I've always loved the results of small units grouped into massive numbers - paintings by Sol LeWitt and Agnes Martin and Robert Morris are examples of this kind of inquiry - they took the imagery off of the visual grid and made the grid the subject. I've wanted to bring that kind of sensibility to a more portable, personal format by making jewelry - off-loom stitches are often used with a grid to make pictorial patterns - I'm interested in the underlying structure versus the picture possibility.


Judy, aka beadbug:












I love the versatility of beadweaving from the objects I can create to the variety of stitches and the ease of altering or inventing my own.


Esther, aka GreenEnvyDesigns:













I love that the medium is so versatile. It’s an everlasting supply for original new materials and sizes and shapes. No matter what you could think of it can be made from beads. I enjoy exploring new possibilities and go so big no-one else has ever done it (such as my beaded bra tops) I like how it is a very relaxing art. It makes me feel peaceful at heart. If shared with a nice cup of tea of course ;-)


Morwyn, aka AnotherCountry:













What I love most is that I become so deeply involved in the process that Self just fades away and Creation (conceptualizing, sketching, and crafting) becomes All.


Claire, aka ClaireCreations:












I don't know what I love about beadweaving. It's time consuming and often very frustrating, but I love to see a whole piece emerge from those teeny little beads. I also find it soothing and relaxing -- at least, I do when things go smoothly and I'm not trying to thread a needle or fight thread that somehow got itself all twisted into a knot where no knot should be.


Susan, aka ClinkscalesArts:











I have to say I love the complexity and intricacy of beadweaving. The fact that you can take tiny pieces of glass along with a needle and thread and weave them into beautiful jewelry astounds me. I am very much a beginning beadweaver, I've completed less than 10 pieces (but I've started many more!), but I find myself drawn to the complex designs. Because I am drawn to these, it takes me a long time to finish pieces. Sometimes, I don't even start a piece because I know how long it will take and I don't want to commit to it. I admire the designs of beadweavers like Cynthia Rutledge and Laura McCabe.

Another aspect of beadweaving I love is the color. I love to put this bead against that one and look at how the light plays on the two. Do they go together? Do I need a different shade? The color draws me in. Thought I love color, I'm not a fan of bright colors. I prefer deep jewel tones and muted earthy colors. I respect an artist that can use bright, bold colors, but I am not one of those.


Sooz, aka boodlersbeads:











What's not to love? It's something not everyone can (or will) do and you get these amazing fluid pieces that you can wear, sell and/or admire. Sometimes the constant repetition is soothing when I'm stressed and I know I just have to pick up a bead and stitch to make something pretty.


Kathy, aka KathysKraftyKreations:









I love beading because I can take a little bag of beads, all separate and apart, and join them together with a needle and thread into something beautiful that can be proudly worn or displayed.


Lauri, aka lauridesigns:












Seeing something come into being. Besides it is a soothing exercise for me.


Patricia, aka SilverDragon:














I love the intricacy and detail that comes together in beadweaving to make such a wide variety of beautiful and expressive art. There are so many weaves (stitches) and variations of these and it's all endless. One need not ever make more than one of a kind and still never reach the end of creativity! It's a fusion of painting and sculpture with light and tiny bits of amazing glass though it expresses itself so differently than paints and pencils and ink. What's not to love (ok, well, losing tiny beads in the carpet I guess)?

Friday, January 18, 2008

Drumroll, please . . .

And the winner of the Etsy BeadWeavers RED challenge is

Fennel Skellyman's Fire Garden Necklace



Fennel could not be here to receive his reward (he gets to pick the theme for the March challenge) but assures us that being
(a) the first male member of Etsy BeadWeavers and
(b) a winner with his first entry into an EBW challenge
will not go to his ego ;)

***APPLAUSE***
***STANDING OVATION***

276 supporters of Etsy BeadWeavers also determined the following nine runners-up entries in the challenge. Our congratulations go out to their creators and all the Etsy BeadWeavers who have been coming up with beaded wonders to meet our challenges :)

  • 2nd -- Simply Red - Leaving (40) by AnotherCountry
  • 3rd -- Red Bargello Hearts Peyote Cuff (21) by SandFibers
  • 4th -- Magic Red Carpet (17) by triz
  • 5th -- Shades of Red Bracelet (1) by clairecreations
  • 6th -- Beating Heart Necklace (7) by triz
  • 7th -- Scarlett sez Fiddle Dee Dee Chocker (22) by cigarboxbeads
  • 8th -- Red Freefrom Netted Cuff (15) by vickijensen
  • 9th -- Red Lacewing (3) by GreenEnvyDesigns
  • 10th -- And love goes round . . . Beaded Bead Necklace (35) by ClinkscalesArts
To see these and all the other entries (and to find links to their Etsy listing), please take a look at the post below this one (January 6, 2008).

While Fennel ponders the theme for the March Challenge, Swanee of MistyRidgeBeads has announced the theme for the February Challenge:

Spring Break

Keep an eye out for another round of stunning entries for that monthly challenge in early February.

Sunday, January 6, 2008

Etsy BeadWeavers See R*E*D

We had forty-two (42!!!) entries for the Etsy BeadWeavers December 2007/January 2008 Challenge. Our theme was simple:
RED

We're hoping you will find something for your special Valentine (which could be yourself, of course ;o) in our collection.

DecJan ebwc

1. Shades of Red Bracelet
by clairecreations

2. Fire Garden Necklace
by fskellyman

3. Red Lacewing (extravagant bead woven butterfly hand flower)
by GreenEnvyDesigns

4. Follow Your Heart - Freeform Peyote Bracelet
by totallytwisted

5. Red Star Necklace and Earring Set
by clairecreations

6. The Red Road Less Traveled Freeform Peyote Bracelet
by myfairladyvt4

7. Beating Heart Necklace
by triz

8. Pomegranate Seed Lip Balm Holder
by arosebyname

9. Red Whimsy-Freeform Peyote Stitch Bracelet
by crissytraparts

10. Hot Pepper Keychain
by arosebyname

11. Red Brick Road Freeform Bracelet
by myfairladyvt4

12. Bordeaux Bijoux
by BeadJewelryShopgirl

13. Rocket - Freeform Peyote Necklace
by totallytwisted

14. Sabatini
by thebeadedlily

15. Red Freeform Netted Cuff
by vickijensen

16. Fire and Ice Right Angle Weave Bracelet
by crissytraparts

17. Magic Red Carpet
by triz

18. Red Rocks Bracelet
by KathysKraftyKreation

19. Hubbles Bracelet
by KathysKraftyKreation

20. Simply Red Crystal Bracelet
by beautyinthebeads

21. Red Bargello Hearts Peyote Cuff
by SandFibers

22. Scarlett sez Fiddle Dee Dee Choker
by cigarboxbeads

23. Red Hair Goblin from a Recycled LP
by Tresijas

24. Royal Flash Bangle
by triz

25. Sultry Cellini Spiral Bracelet
by hands2heal

26. Red Floral Herringbone Cuff Bracelet
by hands2heal

27. SIMPLY RED AND A PEARL BRACELET
by dawnchastain

28. Garnet Lace Necklace
by LauriDesigns

29. A Vila Mon Coeur, Gardi Li Mon
by DantesSpirit

30. Simply Red Necklace Carnelian
by LauriDesigns

31. SIMPLY RED This hearts for you
by dawnchastain

32. Red Choker Necklace
by BoodlersBeads

33. SeaWord
by SalamanderHouse

34. Ligaments and Disks A Fringe Beaded Bead
by thejadedog

35. And love goes round... Beaded Bead Necklace
by ClinkscalesArts

36. Red, V-shape necklace with white glass heart pendant
by GreenEnvyDesigns

37. Flowers For Scarlett Beadwoven and Bead Adorned Necklace
by beadbug

38. Passion
by RegalBeads

39. Sinfully RED Bead Woven Triple Spiral Bracelet
by MistyRidgeBeads

40. Simply Red - Leaving
by AnotherCountry

41. Red Bargello Ribbon Peyote Cuff
by SandFibers

42. Red Between the Lines - Beadwoven Cuff
by time2cre8

Tuesday, January 1, 2008

BeadWeaver in Bead Trends Magazine!!

We love it when our members are featured in publications! Bead Trends magazine features the hottest trends in beads and hand-crafted jewelry, and the pages are filled with instructions for earrings, bracelets, and necklaces in a variety of styles and techniques. If you've never seen this magazine, you'll be pleasantly surprised at the format and content, as it contains almost no advertising whatsoever!

The January/February 2008 issue of the magazine features four designs by our own Sooz Acuna! Sooz' Etsy shop, Sooz Originals, features variations on some of the designs.

First are Sooz' Rocket Fish Earrings. These aren't beadwoven, but they're certainly cute.


Sooz also has instructions in the magazine for a necklace made with interlocking chains and for a bracelet that features one of her own polymer clay focal beads.

What fun!

Sunday, December 16, 2007

2008 Bead and Button Show

The 2008 Bead and Button Show class catalog was published online on December 14. You can browse the classes, order souvenirs and special events tickets; and in just another month you'll be able to register for your favorite classes online!

The show, touted as the premier beading show in the world, is held every year in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. This year it's at the Midwest Airlines Center from June 1 through 8.

There are hundreds of classes and workshops offered during the week of the show, in all sorts of techniques and media. This year they're introducing Fundamentals in Techniques workshops aimed at beginners, instructing them in a specialized area of study over three days. There are also Master Classes which focus on intermediate and advanced students; and there are General Education Classes which include bead stitches, loomwork, wirework, bead embroidery, bead crochet, and a huge variety of other techniques.

If you live near Milwaukee, or if you just want to have a vacation where you can overload on BEADS, check out the website. As a past attendee, I must warn you of a few things:
- The hotel (the Hyatt Regency, in downtown Milwaukee) has a block of rooms available for show attendees. Those rooms go quickly, so make your reservation early!
- Some of the classes fill up quickly, too, so if you're thinking of taking a class make sure you sign up as soon as they're available.
- Take lots of sturdy suitcases with you to haul away all the gorgeous beads you'll find offered by the exhibitors.
- Forewarn your family members that you're going to be beading like crazy for months after the show.

I've attended the show for the past three or four years, and I can't wait to return. The exhibits are open on Saturday and Sunday; and it takes both those days to make it through all the offerings. A lot of the exhibitors have special show pricing, so there are some great deals to be had.

Check out the website to see more info: Bead and Button Show

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Etsy BeadWeavers in Step by Step Beads!

We love it when our members' creations are published, and if you peruse the pages of the January/February 2008 issue of Step by Step Beads you're sure to recognize Carol Dean Sharpe's signature cuff. Turn just a few more pages, and you'll find Leslie Rogalski's Comet Anemone bracelet!

Carol Dean Sharpe, whose Etsy shop is called SandFibers, creates cuffs in just about every color and pattern imaginable; and the patterns are, in most cases, her own designs. Within her shop you'll find everything from randomly-assembled blends of bead colors to stripes, braids, triangles, her signature spirals, and even a houndstooth pattern! Browse her shop some more, and you'll find rings, pendants, necklaces, amulet pouches, and other beautiful beadwoven masterpieces.


Leslie Rogalski,
whose Etsy shop is called Leslie19083, is the editor in chief of Step by Step Beads, as well as a contributing editor to two other publications. To me that sounds like a full-time job, but Leslie also manages to create original, unusual, and finely crafted bead jewelry! Her shop contains just a few of these goodies, but it's obvious from just viewing those few pieces that you're seeing the work of a talented bead artist.

Kudos to both Carol Dean and to Leslie! It's wonderful to see beadweaving presented as the artform we all know it to be.

Monday, December 10, 2007

What Inspires Us!

We asked our Etsy BeadWeavers, What inspires your beadweaving? Not surprisingly, their responses are as individual as their creations.


Kim of Regal Beads: I've never really thought much about this before. First of all, I believe that God has given me the gift of creativity.

How things come together for me? Well, sometimes I really love a colour personally and that inspires me to use it in some way. Sometimes I am looking at my beads trying to decide and some colours just jump out! Other times another's work will inspire an idea. (And I am grateful that, when this has happened, they have gladly told me it was fine!)

Beadweaving is one of my main creative outlets. It seems I am forever wanting to try something in the back of my mind, while in the middle of my current project!

11-11-07 Caught in the Net Treasury

Trish of SkyesMedicine: Anything and everything. As I am not an amazing designer like so many of the others out here, I bead what catches my eye. A lot of native influence since that is where my knowledge of beadweaving comes from, but if I like it I bead it...

11-16-07 bead, bead, bead away Treasury

Ann of Inspired Jewelry by Ann Burke: I get inspired when I see something in nature, in a magazine or anywhere, that looks like something I like, kind of a different thing. That is probably why I like freeform so much. I do patterns sometime and do 2 or 3 to get the hang of it, but always return to freeform. Putting together different colors and shapes of beads, is my favorite.

11-16-07 Etsy Beadweavers are Fabulous Treasury by myfairladyvt4

Dawn of DawnChastain: EVERYTHING, if I see metal work, I wonder how I can get the same shape with beads. If I see a shell I wonder how to attach beads to it. If see a great color combination I try to recreate it with a bead mix.
I find that if I am spiritually "right", not stressed out, mad or worried that I am totally more creative.

11-18-07 Caught in a Net Treasury by noeasybeads

Cyndi of Beauty in the Beads: A lot of inspiration comes from fellow beaders, Beadbug in particular. She has always been an inspiration to me. Some of the things she comes up with makes me want to learn more stitches and more techniques. Before I met her, I was strictly a loom beader (for over 35 years)! I now know how to do a lot more with beads than I ever dreamed of! She inspires me to be all that I can. When I see what other beaders can do, it inspires me to try something new. I am part Native American, and I was taught how to loom bead when I was 12 years old by a close family friend (we called her Auntie) who was Choctaw-I actually think she was one of my real aunts. She has since passed on and I am deeply grateful for all the beading knowledge that she passed on to me. Other than a physical inspiration, is nature. Most of my beaded items have a nature theme (Summer Sun, Winter Chill, Ocean Deep, Sea Waves, Earth, Water, Fire, etc).

11-18-07 Beadiful things Treasury by noeasybeads

Bev of NoEasyBeads: Art beads inspire my beadweaving. I like to us them as focal points. Different shapes and size of the beads inspire my work.

11-18-07 EBW wove it up Treasury by GreenEnvyDesigns

Jean of Totally Twisted: There are many things that inspire me to bead. I think the biggest inspiration would be color. I see colors in nature, in fashion, in the beads themselves and I have all sorts of ideas and patterns I want to try floating around in my head. I guess being an artist (abstract painter) I am very influenced by color. I like to play with color and use unusual color combinations to create my jewelry. Another thing that is inspiring to me are other beaders, especially on EBW - when I see the beautiful items they are all making it makes me want to strive to do better - to get to the next level in my work.

11-21-07 Black as night Treasury

Sarah of TheBeadedLily: The same thing that inspires all my beading, the beads themselves. I love the colors, shapes, finishes. I love to form the finished product. I love seeing how one set of beads makes another set gleam. I love that people wonder what the inspiration is when I'm just having a blast with beads. I love that the finished product is beautiful, that it's art.

11-21-07 Beadweaver Creativity Treasury by myfairladyvt4

MaryLou of Time2Cre8: The better question would be, 'What doesn't inspire my beadweaving?' A trip to the garage, and I find interesting bits of hardware that just call out to be incorporated into a necklace or bracelet. A walk on the beach, and I gather stones and bits of glass that have washed up; and then I try to figure out how to incorporate them into a bead woven creation. I love books, and while I don't spend much time at all copying a pattern directly from a book, I do spend a lot of time paging through them and being inspired to create something similar to the pieces I find. Colors and patterns are everywhere, and it's so much fun to try to take plaids, stripes, polka dots, and diamonds and translate them from fabric or paper into beads. I'm never short on inspiration, but I'd love it if there were more hours in the day...

11-23-07 Delicate Delicas Treasury

Wolf of Dante's Spirit: Life in general. Sometimes a movie will give me an idea (Calypso's Dream was inspired by The Odyssey), sometimes Nature itself inspires me. Sometimes my imagination just takes over.

12-2-07 All that glitters Treasury by skyesmedicine

Ivey of Enso: My beading is inspired by modernist and minimalist fine art and music, the colors of gemstones and simple forms to best show them off, and by decades of modernist fashion and ornamentation. The expandable, fluid nature of woven forms allow for infinite possible shapes, colors, and scales.

12-2-07 Tension can be good Treasury

Judy of BeadBug's Boutique: I am inspired primarily by nature as many of my beading involves flowers and leaves, but also by colors. I gravitate towards shiny beads but sometimes use matt.

12-4-07 Beadweaving Brilliance Treasury by myfairladyvt4

Esther of Green Envy Designs: Inspiration to me is the beauty I see of this planet. So for my "visual" pieces I use a lot of animal and nature references. For instance my swan handflower or my ocean dream dolphin embroidered necklace. Yet I also find inspiration in many other places! One of my favorites are contests/challenges because they usually give a theme and that always gives me an excuse to beat my best and explore new ways of beading.

12-5-07 All decked out for Christmas! Treasury by RegalBeads

Morwyn of Another Country: The natural world, poetry, literature, Impressionist art, classical music, science fiction and fantasy novels and movies, trance music, video games, the history of costume, European decorating magazines, Pre-Raphaelite art, books on color theory, and other beadweavers' work.

12-5-07 Our addiction Treasury by RegalBeads

Claire of ClaireCreations: Many things inspire my work. Designs I see from other mediums that I try out with beads, the look and feel of different beads combined with different gemstones. Beautiful work I see from other beaders makes me want to create something of my own. Like I said. Many things inspire my work.

12-7-07 It's a Beadweavers Christmas Treasury by myfairladyvt4

Sooz of Sooz Originals: Really the beads themselves. I am amazed that stitching these little ones together one way or another can make such a diverse product! I love the colors, and the finishes and they inspire a piece or a direction.

10-26-07 Studies in Monochrome

Melody of Salamander House Studio: That's a hard question. I go in streaks. For a long time, I was working on Greek and Roman myths, and I think that particular obsession was fueled by reading the Percy Jackson books by Rick Riordan. Right this minute I'm very aware of the natural world and the odd color juxtapositions thrown out there by Mother Nature. Vintage fashion is another thing that makes me think in beads, as is geometry. And chemistry- or anything seen through the microscope, I want to reinterpret the very tiny with the very shiny.


We now return you to your regularly scheduled programming . . .