Can you spot the bead?
Here’s a Rings & Things logo painted by Noryan on one of our loading dock doors:
Bead? What bead?
Leave a comment if you know what I’m asking about! 🙂
Can you spot the bead?
Here’s a Rings & Things logo painted by Noryan on one of our loading dock doors:
Bead? What bead?
Leave a comment if you know what I’m asking about! 🙂
Since we were talking about prayer beads earlier this week, how about featuring olive wood beads?
You can believe it: these are made in Bethlehem. That Bethlehem. What a great idea for wooden rosary beads!
Like many wooden beads, olive beads have large holes. So you could string these on certain styles of chain, as well as on cording or beading cable.
A note about color. (This occurred to me while searching in our website.) Olive wood beads are brown in color–very different from our “olive” colored glass beads! 🙂
And I know someone will ask this, so right up front let me say no, our olive beads aren’t the pits! They’re actual carved wood…so they’re wonderfully smooth and silky to the touch.
We’ve been experimenting with COPPRclay!
Some images from a Saturday Showroom Workshop with copper clay last week.
Photos of finished jewelry made with copper metal clay coming soon!
Do you have COPPRclay creations? Share them at our Facebook BEAD FANS page!
I’ve got some happy talk for you…inspired by a sold-out, snappy touring production of South Pacific that just made a beachhead in our town:
Wash the Blahs Right Outta Hair Jewelry!
Several new hair findings from Rings & Things will get you singing, from South Pacific to the North Atlantic.
From star to supporting role, our hair components fit your playbill!
Your Headquarters for Hair Findings
Jewelry Inspirations: |
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“Master Ip” Hair Comb |
“Pretty Poison Ice Queen” Hair Pin |
“Black Scarlet” Hair Stick |
For more free jewelry inspirations:search our Design Gallery for hair. |
What are beads for? That’s a simple question that we may not consciously think of very often. I personally prefer my beads to be more beautiful than useful 🙂 But one way they’ve been consistently used over the centuries is as prayer beads.
You may know about rosaries, but here are a couple more kinds of prayer beads you might want to be familiar with:
Rudraksha beads — this is a natural-material bead, made from the seed inside the fruit of a tree in India. We’re told that traditionally, people talk about “how many faces” or segments these beads have. Some say the number of faces relates to the particular spiritual powers the rudraksha has; numbers from 1 to 108 have been reported. Interestingly, there are 108 rudraksha beads on a mala, which leads us to…
Malas are prayer necklaces, used very much like rosaries to help a person keep track of prayers being said. (This is mostly in the Buddhist and Hindu traditions.) Malas are made with any of several varieties of beads, including rudrakshas. Another mala bead that I’ve been really impressed by are sandalwood beads, as fragrant as the wood they’re made from. Rosewood mala beads are pretty too, with a rich dark red luster.
…and the great thing is, they make wonderful jewelry of all kinds, for everyone.
We were talking just today at Rings & Things, saying how incredibly fun these beads are…so I have to share The Magnesite Skulls with you!
Skull beads, that is:
See how perfectly these li’l craniums blend cute ‘n’ cool? Being magnesite means they’re really affordable too.
Please take note of a bonus feature, flat magnesite skulls = alien heads / dinosaur faces …
I just had to get that off my chest. Thanks!
We’re excited because of expanding design options, like new kidney ear wires, from a pretty standard 25mm / 1-inch size, up to a “jumbo” ear wire of 47mm (over 1 and 3/4 inches)! Imagine what regal jewelry you can build with these…
Have a ball with our
new ball-end head pins, too! These head pins have so many uses…have you ever thought of putting one into a ring, like this?
All of these great new findings are available in Rings & Things’s usual nice selection of sizes, a palette of platings and a fanfare of finishes!
Hot tip: search in our Design Gallery for “kidney” or “ball end” and savor some sweet creative inspirations from R&T’s staff of jewelry artisans.
Tip: Use bail-making pliers for more than just bails! Here’s how:
Bailing pliers make swell roundish shapes. Ear wires are roundish. So…whip out the Wubbers for more than just bails!
PS: Bail pliers also make nice jump rings and more! This is one tool that makes lots of custom findings…so make hay with your bailer 🙂
Ode on Artistic Wire®:
Thou craft wire so easy to use,
Available now in brilliant new hues,
Searchable by color in our online store,
With 25 shades, who could need more?
Credits: John Keats, Kameron Fox, Amy Scalise, Sondra Barrington.
Have you seen? A bunch of new gold-filled findings have made their appearance here…
…like, say, these toggles…
…like these patterned hoops…
…including ovals!