Multi-purpose this: another use for wire protectors

June 11, 2009

Here’s a quick tip that we found at the excellent Starving Jewelry Artists discussion forum:

Multipurpose this: learn another use for wire protectors!

“I shared this with a friend awhile back and she thought it was a great idea. I came up with it out of frustration.

“I use wire guards (or what ever name you may call them) as extra protection and finishing when using watch faces.

“I never liked the look of the beading wire going through the hole but more than that I was concerned about the durability. I always used two strands of high quality beading wire but never felt extremely confident. Now I have no worries and although it is obvious I still think it looks a little better or more finished.”

– Sophisticated Hippie

Know another great tip for using findings? Share it here in a comment!

DON’T MISS OUR June-July giveaway:
* in our online store, find a fave product & review it there, then…
* …leave a comment about it at the contest article in our blog
* On August 3, five winners will receive coveted Rings & Things gift certificates!
* Enter often & see if you win!

I Facebooked your bead seller: "Rings & Things – Bead fans"

June 9, 2009

Hanging out on Facebook? Fan us!

75-503-20_logo

We’re already chatting with lots of you on Twitter…now Rings & Things is running a fan page on Facebook.

It’s called “Rings & Things – Bead Fans!

Become a fan. Join the club. It’s very exclusive–only those who read this blog post can get in. 🙂

Have a favorite “someone” to follow on Facebook or Twitter? Suggest them to us in a comment below!

DON’T MISS OUR June-July giveaway:
* in our online store, find a fave product & review it there, then…
* …leave a comment about it at the contest article in our blog
* On August 3, five winners will receive coveted Rings & Things gift certificates!
* Enter often & see if you win!

Create your own gift registry in R&T's online store!

June 8, 2009

You asked, we listened: A feature that you’ve been asking for is to have a Gift Registry for your personal wish list of Rings & Things products…

You'll be charmed by our gift registry!

An improved gift registry: This feature provides a great way to let your friends and family know what you want for Christmas, birthdays and other special events. (Just make sure they know about our $25 minimum order, and $4 small-order fee for orders between $25
& $50).

The gift registry feature is not just for requesting gifts, though! Bead societies can use it to create project parts lists,
businesses can use it to share upcoming order info between employees, and anyone can use it like a wish list of things to buy
in the future. In fact, the gift registry has an advantage over the wish list feature of our store, in that it allows you to save desired quantities!

gift_registry_44-687-0

Here’s how you set up your own Gift Registry:

Now just fill in some blanks:

  • Specify the Event Type — the “occasion” for people to buy you R&T items. (Birthday? Wedding?)
  • Give it a name. (“Dave’s 29th birthday”?)
  • And a date. (You don’t mind folks knowing when your birthday is, do you?)
  • Specify what kind of shipping address the items should go to. (“My address” goes right to you; “Customer’s address” goes to your generous friend.)
  • :Look at the other few options that display, and check any that matter to you. Now click Continue.

From here, it’s easy to shop for products to add to your Gift Registry. You know which ones you’ve had your eye on!

Have you thought of other features you wish were in our online store? Suggest them here in a comment!

DON’T MISS OUR June-July giveaway:
* in our online store, find a fave product & review it there, then…
* …leave a comment about it at the contest article in our blog
* On August 3, five winners will receive coveted Rings & Things gift certificates!
* Enter often & see if you win!

Featured bead: Cowrie shell

June 4, 2009

This week’s featured bead is an old, old, old favorite!

Still hip after 1,000 years...cowrie shell beads

Loose matte cowrie shells, a favorite from Africa for centuries, get their extra-large stringing holes by grinding or breaking off the top of the shell. With the tops ground off like this, they sit nice and flat, forming a smooth border.

How big are they? Anywhere from about a half-inch by 1/3 inch, to an inch by a half-inch. (13x8x8mm to 25x20x10mm.)

These bleached shells are often sewn upside-down on beaded Nigerian wall hangings, belts and ceremonial items. We’ve been seeing these woven or sewn onto chokers, too. They’re a classic staple of macramé work, too!

Love cowries, and want more ethnic beads? Rings & Things carries a full line of African beads, both old trade beads, and newer beads made or strung in Africa for the world-wide bead trade. Trade beads are old and/or used beads, and will show varying amounts of wear. Newly-made African beads are generally handmade in small communities. Style and availability vary.

DON’T MISS OUR June-July giveaway:
* in our online store, find a fave product & review it there, then…
* …leave a comment about it at the contest article in our blog
* On August 3, five winners will receive coveted Rings & Things gift certificates!
* Enter often & see if you win!

Contest: Review a product

June 3, 2009

Rings & Things’ eagerly anticipated new blog event!

“Product Reviews” Contest

Beads!  Win a gift certificate & get some!

Your valuable feedback on Rings & Things products could win you one of five $50 gift certificates!

The rules:

  • Submit your review(s) of any product(s) in Rings & Things’ online store between June 1 and July 31, 2009.
  • Tell us once you’ve left your first review. Do this by commenting at this blog post.
    (Otherwise we won’t be able to contact you when you win!)
  • We’ll randomly select the winners on August 3, 2009.
    Winners will be notified via email.
The lucky 'Wynn' rune charm :)

The lucky ‘Wynn’ rune charm 🙂

How to submit a product review:

1. In our online store, pick a Rings & Things product you’ve bought from us before.
2. Click on the ‘Write your own review’ link.
3. Rate the product, between 1 and 5 stars, and write an honest review.*

* Negative reviews are accepted, as long as they’re honest. Rings & Things retains the right to remove fake or nonsensical reviews from the contest.

Not open to current Rings & Things employees.

So, comment below & tell us which product(s) you reviewed in our store!

You won!

June 2, 2009
Winners!

Winners!

If your name is joia or Beadsophy, you’ve won the May blog drawing here at Rings & Things!

Congratulations to both of you.

I’ll announce a very exciting new contest for June — tomorrow.

See you then!

Peace!

Out!

July's featured birthstone: Turquoise

June 1, 2009

Because July’s birthstones are a motley crew (see the end of this post), I’m picking out just one of them to feature, since there’s so much to know about turquoise!

July's featured birthstone: turquoise

July’s featured birthstone: turquoise

Turquoise is the modern, more often seen replacement for the traditional July “Foundation stone”, sardonyx. I’d like to start out by showing you some of the affordable genuine turquoise beads that are available. (I’ll try to show similar-sized beads to make comparison easier.)

  • For the highest-quality birthstone jewelry, use AA-grade turquoise (natural turquoise) like these delicate 2mm rounds:aa_grade_turquoise_21-882-502
  • Also excelling in their class are A- to B-grade turquoise (stabilized turquoise) beads such as these nice Kingman heishi:
    a_to_b_grade_turquoise_20-470-04
  • Good Mexican turquoise is also sometimes available. It’s often in nugget forms, like these extra-small beads:mexican_turquoise_20-421-02
  • Another variety of genuine turquoise, which is available reasonable prices, is stabilized Chinese turquoise. To illustrate this type, let’s look at some 2-3mm rounds:
    chinese_turquoise_20-410-2
    For even greater economy, and a wider color range to work with, try some other stones that are called turquoise.
  • There’s African turquoise (actually a kind of jasper!), like these 3x5mm tubes:
    african_turquoise_21-613-125
  • Yellow turquoise (more likely a jasper or serpentine) is a pleasingly-colored stone often imported from China, like these 4mm rounds: yellow_turquoise_21-884-064
  • Block turquoise is manmade from plastic resins and dyes. So it’s often one of the more affordable varieties, like these low-priced 2mm rounds: block_turquoise_21-882-202
  • You might also be interested in our economically-priced “turquoise” magnesite. It’s a thrifty alternative and still looks pretty, like these 4mm rounds:
    turquoise_magnesite_21-884-700

Finally, consider some other stones in the turquoise family (which you can read about in our Gemstone Beads Index). There’s apple-green turquoise and lime turquoise, for example. You can often find specially purchased, special-priced strands of these and similar stones at Rings & Things’ BeadTour bead shows…another great reason to attend when we’re in your town!

Other July birthstones run the gamut: ruby (also Summer’s birthstone), synthetic corundum, emerald (for Cancer), onyx (for Leo), and topaz (St. Matthew’s stone).Thanks once again to Bruce G. Knuths’ “Jeweler’s Resource” book for all of this information!

Featured bead: Czech (Bohemian) glass beads

May 28, 2009

The original Boho!

czech_basic

A staple of the bead world, Czech glass beads come in so many varieties that we couldn’t easily pick one out to feature today. But we’d love to take you on a tour through the history of these great beads.

  • Roman times: Beads are already being made in what’s now Bohemia (the Czech Republic).
  • 900’s AD: Bohemian graves include local beads.
  • 1200’s: Bohemian glass factories make many items, including beads for rosaries.
  • 1550’s: A glass industry is founded in the cities of Jablonec, Stanovsko, and Bedrichov. Glass beads are made by cottage crafters for use in major jewelry factories.
  • mid-1800’s: Czech “sample men” travel the world, taking notes and sketches of what kinds of beads people want. Back home, the factories make these new designs, which sell well and in turn increase the demand for beads.
  • later 1800’s: Technological advances, like multi-bead molds and machines to handle some of this work, make Bohemia a center for pressed-glass beads.
  • 1920’s: The Czechs are the leading bead exporters in the world.

The Czech bead industry has had its ups and downs since, due to economic conditions, wars, and politics, but Czech glass beads remain one of the most important elements in the jewelry-maker’s tool kit.

czech_firepolish

What’s special about the way the classic Czech beads are made? It’s all about the contrast with older bead-making techniques. Previously, beads had been made by winding hot glass around a form, or blowing it (either into a mold or freehand). The Bohemian innovation, around 1860, was to place hot glass into a mold,which was sometimes built into a pair of tongs. The molded glass was then pierced by a rod, slowly cooled, then had the mold “seams” ground off to leave a smooth bead.

Unlike the older techniques, molding or “pressing” was easy to automate, which meant production could increase to meet significant demand and maintain high quality. A less obvious benefit of the pressing technique is that holes for stringing can be put in the beads at any angle imaginable. Even multiple holes are possible. The reason why this only became possible with molded beads is that these are pierced only after being formed — previously, beads were formed around a rod, in effect predetermining where the hole would be located.

czech_fancy

Today, Czech glass beads are available in a multitude of forms from the basic to the fanciful. Firepolish beads, one of the earliest imitations of crystal, are beloved for their heat-smoothed faceting. “Fancy” Czech beads range from flower spacers to glass bead caps to faux turquoise, and from leaf-shaped drops to skulls to ladybugs.

Sources:

Suggested further reading:

Want to suggest a featured bead? Leave a comment!

May giveaway:
* You enter by leaving comments this month
* At the end of May, 2 winners will receive coveted Rings & Things goodie packs!
*
So read the blog regularly, to enter a lot & to see if you won!

Does this resin-ate with you?

May 27, 2009

Last Friday, Rings & Things people test-drove some new resin products that we’re adding to our store soon.

Here’s a fun glimpse of some kinds of stuff you can make with resin! If any of the words below have a particular sparkle, they were borrowed from Sunny Barrington. (I’m trying to get her to blog here!)

resin_clothespins_3552369823_7c3ff276dc1

wee-little clothespins (in goo)

  • Tiny powder blue and soft pink clothespins safely ensconced in a protective resin coating, nestled inside a mold for shape-a-tivity. These strange little creations may eventually be turned into something quite suitable for a mother-to-be with a fondness for bric-a-brac.

Monkeys, weeds, hardening goop...who could ask for more?

Monkeys, weeds, hardening goop…who could ask for more?

drink monkey & the living weeds

  • A sprightly monkey takes the big drink and commits to a life inside a resin rectangle. It’s doubtful whether this pending creation will contribute to the world of jewelry creations much beyond the eye candy level…
  • Next to the monkey, you will find some weed blossoms that were submerged (while alive) into a receptive resin-y grave. Not too sure how this will turn out, but determined that the posies were positioned to look best from the back… oops-a-daisy.

See more unbridled resinaceous inspirations in the Rings & Things resin photostream!

Have something you’d like to see dipped in this stuff? Leave a comment to request an experiment…

May giveaway:
* You enter by leaving comments this month
* At the end of May, 2 winners will receive coveted Rings & Things goodie packs!
*
So read the blog regularly, to enter a lot & to see if you won!

Beads as a war memorial

May 26, 2009

A simple idea for a sober occasion.

warmemorial_scan-090119-0001Beads as a war memorial.

We hope your Memorial Day was safe and rewarding.

May giveaway:
* You enter by leaving comments this month
* At the end of May, 2 winners will receive coveted Rings & Things goodie packs!
*
So read the blog regularly, to enter a lot & to see if you won!