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Showing posts with label Beading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beading. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Barely There

Shine, $21



And forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair. 
- Khalil Gibran




On these humid summer days when all you want to do is wear the lightest cottons with the least fuss, you won't even feel these lovelies on your skin. 
Island, $16

Angel, $16

Pure, $16

Daisy, $16

Peace, $16

Blush, $16

Dream, $21

Flaxen Gold, $21

Ocean, $21


Mint, $21Seafoam, $16







Sunday, February 27, 2011

Second Street Jewelry

I've been making jewelry as a hobby for a few years now, and selling it for just over one. When I started my Etsy shop, I named it Something Pretty in honor of my Grandma Suttles, who was known for saying, "Just give me something pretty to look at." The jewelry in my shop didn't have much of a focus at first, just random beaded designs, and looking back, most of them weren't that great, but I was just beginning and learning. I quickly decided I needed a "look," and I wanted it to be familiar enough to attract a large audience, but unique enough to stand out. I found paper flowers in the scrapbooking aisle at Hobby Lobby, and began making necklaces with layered paper flowers. I got more interest and more sales, which I was really excited about. But I was always worried about the durability of paper, so I recently began seeing what I could do with artificial flowers. I'm still playing with that, learning what works and what doesn't. But my interest again began to wander to other types of designs, and now I'm playing with regular beaded jewelry again, and I'm finding that style I was missing a year ago. I love working with gemstones, the bright vibrant colors, natural textures, shiny polish, and huge variety of sizes and shapes. I like marrying natural materials with modern style for high-fashion women...because, you know, I'm so high-fashion. That's me...

Here are my latest designs that are currently for sale in the new Second Street Jewelry shop on Etsy. For more information or to buy, go to http://www.etsy.com/shop/lyndsaydayle. Follow my blog and heart my shop and you'll receive 15% off each purchase. Yes, each. For life.




















Sunday, January 24, 2010

I just love a good wedding!


One of my oldest and dearest friends from childhood is getting married in February. She and and her fiance are planning a simply beautiful winter wedding set at a nearby vineyard. Chilled apple cider, wine and cheese, naturally, will be served, underscoring the couple's affinity for both simplicity and class. Both bride and groom are down-to-earth and love the outdoors, and wanted to incorporate this into the ceremony and reception. They have chosen a palette of cool winter blue and warm natural brown, highlighted by a soft, snowy white, setting the stage for a timelessly romantic and intimate fairytale wedding. The bride and groom will exchange vows beneath an arch dressed in white tulle and lit with brown wicker globes which will encompass small twinkle lights. Reception centerpieces are wicker wreaths ringing white candles set upon circular mirrors. Wanting to incorporate her signature cool blue, I suggested a bead design for the wreath centerpieces, which in the soft candlelight glow will add sparkle, color, and an icy crystalline aspect sure to complement the bride and groom's chosen winter wonderland theme.

I have used a wide selection of beads crafted from a variety of materials: Czech-fired glass, natural gemstone, and acrylic. The majority of blue beads are in the same hue family but in different shades and tints. Most are transparent to allow the candlelight to shine through. The surface of most of the blue beads have a highly polished finish to reflect any light and add that touch of sparkle, and are in the shape of a rectangular prism. I've added acrylic pearls in two sizes and colors, ivory and light brown, to give off a soft glow when reflecting light. My favorite, the labrodorite, are clear and multi-faceted. Labrodorite is a mineral that naturally reflects many colors, and the clear has an oily appearance so that on close inspection one sees pink, green, and blue very faintly beneath the surface. When I took this photo I forgot to remove a purple gift bag from the table just off camera, and the labrodorite picked up the color brilliantly. While I marveled at the make-up of the gemstone, the bride, seeing her centerpiece for the first time, balked at the foreign color I'd apparently added to her color scheme! I explained the mistake and, when she later inspected the centerpiece in person, was relieved. I really must remember to clear a wide space before photographing highly reflective beads in the future!

Also included in the bead design are blue bicone Swarovski crystals, round Czech-fired glass, Czech-fired clear rectangular prisms, and shiny brown seed beads.