Back to the Future
Posted by Elizabeth Hamilton on Feb 11th 2015
I’m going to brag for a bit before getting down to business.
While I was down home for the holidays, I had the opportunity to coach two people through a beading project. These were two people I’d often beaded around, but had never beaded with them. My Mom, and my youngest brother. My brother picked up peyote stitch like a seasoned pro, whipping out a bangle in a couple of hours on Christmas Eve while my Mom was at work.
Let me tell you, I had done everything possible to make it harder than it should have been! We were originally going to do kumihimo with beads. Fail! Not, his failure...mine. I couldn’t make the beads sit nicely. (I see some remedial kumi in my future.) Then we resorted to peyote stitch with the supplies we had on hand. With kumihimo cord. And big eye needles. We broke every one in the pack. I HATE big eye needles. (I’m also not a fan of those big eye paintings or Precious Moments, so maybe it’s a thing.)
And yet, my brother came back for more! HE chose the project the three of us made the Saturday after Christmas. If the two of us had been racing, it would have been a close race. This time we used fireline and tulip needles. If he really takes up this obsession, he’ll be replacing me on the blog before I know it. Both my brother and my mother made their own color bead selections, and both of their bracelets came out great. I finished mine after taking the photo. The pattern is by Carole Ohl.
Being in the local bead shop and explaining how bead sizes work, and looking with fresh eyes at all the beads may have been the best Christmas present I could have gotten. It inspired me to come back to North Carolina and just have fun with beading. No challenges, no stress, just playing around.
Or playing in the round as the case may be. I was really feeling ladder stitch/brickstitch again.
I started with the amber colored glass teardrops, wrapping them with a few strands of Nymo before I began adding firepolished beads from my collection. I had gathered up quite a collection of 4mm odds and ends, so this project allowed me to use all of them. The borders are supergalvanized Toho 11/0s.
Next I decided to make some fun earrings out of green plastic faceted beads with fringe of the tiny loops from the box. This pair uses something between brickstitch and herringbone to make the graduated border. Since the bulk of each earring is plastic, they are still nice and light.
Then I went rounds crazy. Perhaps you could say I’d gone ‘round the bend. I got ambitious with the vintage faux pearls in the box. It was time to get out some of the many choices from my growing superduo collection and make some flowers. I started by making eight identical blossoms of pearls plus picasso finish (can you tell that it’s my favorite?) and gold seed beads with really long thread tails. The earrings are this basic unit.
The next step was to make larger blossoms with additional rows of superduos and seed beads. Three units got one additional round of superduos. One of those got a tiny row of 15s as an accent. The last blossom got two additional rounds of superduos and the accent band. I fastenened this largest flower to one of my mid-sized units, and from there it was on to bail making. I really enjoyed making this set.
Because I’d felt so satisfied by the process, I opted to make two more pendants using the same principles. I’ve dubbed them “the sisters”. The little sister is the same thread pattern as my mid-sized units from the necklace. Why does it look so different? The larger center bead and reduced contrast takes the emphasis off of the petals, so that the first round stands out. The outer ring consists of lentils instead of superduos.
The big sister uses brickstitched delicas and multiple rows of two-holed triangles for the front. But it was built on the same foundation. It’s easier to see the similarity from the back side.
And this combo of old and new brings me to our big blog news...If you get our email blasts, you may have noticed that the monthly club boxes are leaving...but the Hoard is going nowhere! Well, that’s sort of a half-truth, the goodies will be moving to New Finds, and I will still be here to play with them.
You knew I couldn’t go Hoard-less; withdrawl would be too difficult!