Showing posts with label dia de los muertos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dia de los muertos. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2016

Day of the Dead Blog Hop

Love my Art Jewelry is having a Dia de los Muertos blog hop!  Sugar Skulls everywhere!!!!!

Now, if you follow me at all, you know I love the beauty of a sugar skull.  

Recently I have been doing some lino-cut prints, and even had to do a sugar skull for that!



Anyhow, I had also made sugar skull beads in polymer and in bronze clay.  So I wasn't sure which I wanted to do for this blog hop.  I had originally thought about taking my bronze one and setting it into silver with silver work, maybe even some gemstones bezeled around it.....................but it had a mind of it's own, and I have really been into wire chokers with charms lately, so that is what was born.



Once I decided to use one of my bronze sugar skulls, and do a charm style necklace I got to work


I created the base for the necklace first.

Then I started to pick out my beads



Ginger of the Blue Bottle Tree had sent me some of her beads to design with awhile back.  She used her Rustic Beads Tutorial to create these flowery fun beads.  They turned out to be the perfect accent for this piece!  After all, a sugar skull needs some flowers near it or on it! I LOVE the old paint look, and they are so well made (of course!). The only problem was that I could not fit as many as I wanted to use in my piece.  So I think I will have to visit them again soon.

Anyhow, just as things always go, I had to change out some of my original components due to how the piece lays while worn, and for compositional issues.  

I am very happy with how it turned out.



I even made matching earrings!!!!


If you want to see what everyone else made, hop over to Love my Art Jewelry and check out the links posted.  I am sure there will be lots of great creative eye candy and inspiration this morning!



Thursday, September 24, 2015

Sugar Skull Charm Necklace

I have been wanting to do some posts like this for awhile, but like always, busy busy busy!  

I have a bunch of Sugar Skull focals in the shop, as well as some other focals similar to the sugar skulls, and I wanted to give you guys some idea of what you can do with them. 



I had a few laid out on my desk, as I am prepping for a show this weekend, not sure what to do with them.  

At first I wanted to just add chain and a dangle and keep them super simple.  But it was too simple.............so I planned to add charms to the chain.  I wasn't sure how much to do charm wise, and was sort of thinking they needed chunky charms.
I hadn't finished figuring out that part, when Linda Landig posted a necklace she had made with one of my old bronze skulls, 
(you can purchase Linda's necklace here

and seeing her little dangles sealed the deal for me.  That is what my plain old necklace needed.  Just some simple dangles.  It really captures the Dia de los Muertos feel I think.

So I added my double dangly charms (flower beads by Lisa Peters Art- they were the perfect match!!!)
And I added my chain, and picked out charms to accent the colors in my skull, and voila!  I love the results!


(ceramic stars by Starry Road Studio)

So here are my tips when doing a charm style necklace- not quite a tutorial, but this should help if you tend to struggle with them.

1.  pick out way more stones and beads in a variety of sizes then you will use
2.  lay them out, spacing out larger beads, and filling in the spaces between them with smaller beads
3.  when you use a cable chain, like this one, only hang charms on EVERY OTHER LINK so they lay properly.  the links alternate directions and your charms won't hang right otherwise.  Also, be sure to keep the chain from turning.  I pick it up and make sure the chain is laying correctly so the charms are always added to the bottom of the link
4.  skip a few "hangable" links for each big piece.  I like to hold the piece up to my neck and look at it each time I add a bead to make sure they hang right
5.  Fill the links you skipped with tiny beads to create movement and fill the space without them bumping into the other beads causing them to lay inccorectly.
6.  Try to use beads of a consistent thickness.  if you use beads that are tooooo round they will stick out when you wear it and roll around.
And there you have it.  A simple necklace that is not too plain, not too much!  I haven't taken this one off yet and I cannot wait to design the others on my table.

Remember, you too can make some "charming" necklaces using the components in my shop.  Lots of sugar skulls left.  I love taking the form of a skull and making it pretty.  So fun!

Monday, October 28, 2013

Halloween / Day of the Dead Blog Hop

If you follow me, you may know that I do not do holiday or seasonal jewelry, at least not on purpose.  I do however, love sugar skulls.  I have been making them as components for some time now. 
 
So I couldn't wait to participate in Diana's blog hop.

First I made this necklace using one of my current style sugar skulls in bronze.


It features beads from Lisa Peters Art, Starry Road Studio and bronze links from me with gemstones.  I thought Lisa's rose heart was perfect with the skull and added in some yellows to give it life and color.
 
However, I didn't want to use one of my regular old sugar skulls for the hop.  I wanted to make something REALLY cool.  I had been wanting to try to make a 3-d one in bronze for some time now.  This was the perfect opportunity to try it out. 
 
Well, it was pretty successful.  After the first turned out ok, I right away made another.........
 
This is the more detailed and much larger second one all cleaned up from the kiln
 
 
 
Then came the fun part- making them into jewelry.  I had to fill them with something and give them some sort of eyes.  I used polymer and gemstones and baked them.  Then I attached them to a copper back with rivets. 

 
 
Finally, I got to make them into finished pieces of jewelry.  They are big, chunky and weird, and I adore how they turned out. 
This is the finished piece I made with the sugar skull above. 
 

 It has lava stone behind its eyes, a couple of large criffle beads from Numinosity, a rustic donut from Marsha Neal Studio, some pearls, some gemstones, and lots of little bronze pieces of my own. 
 
This one, is all mine. 
 
 

I also made this one below.  It creeps me out a little more then I thought it would...but I love the colors.  Not so sure of the zombie like eyeball, kinda kills the beauty of the sugar skull, but I am happy with the piece none the less.
 
 
 This one also has a Marsha Neal Studio donut, some Starry Road Studio beads, and some of my bronze, along with gemstones and pearls.
 
I was really happy to try out this 3-d bronze a little further (I had done it before in hearts).  I think I want to add more pretty detail, and perhaps even give the skulls some color in the future.  I am definitely going to take it further.
 
Thanks for the challenge Diana!  I love to find reasons to try new things.
 
To see what everyone else made, hop over to Diana's blog for the link list.


Staci Smith  http://www.stacilouiseoriginals.com/ - You are here

Kathleen Breeding  http://99bobotw.blogspot.com


Dianne Miller  http://www.artbydianne.blogspot.com

Lisa Liddy  http://www.lisaliddy.wordpress.com

Toltec Jewels  http://www.JewelSchoolFriends.com


Laura Medeiros  http://Www.zoeowyn.blogspot.com

Veralynne Malone  http://www.veradesigns.blogspot.com





Jenny Davies-Reazor  http://jdaviesreazor.com/blog







Stephanie LaRosa  http://Www.stringaholic.blogspot.com





Nicole Valentine Rimmer  http://www.nvalentine.blogspot.com




Sarajo Wentling  http://www.sjdesignsjewelry.blogspot.com










Dawn M. Gallop  http://www.flipflopsandpoptarts.com
 

Monday, November 5, 2012

A Hurricane and Life After

Well, in case you don't know, I am located near Philly pa, and we were in the path of hurricane sandy last week.  Though we didn't take the beating the New Jersey coast did, we still have massive amounts of tree's down, and power outages.  My heart is still breaking for our beloved New Jersey coast, and the barrier islands, where my heart lives. 
 
These pics were taken just a month ago, on Long Beach Island, New Jersey. 







My family and I go there often, just for a day trip,  since it's close enough.  I am not exaggerating when I say, this is where my heart lives.  This island, is where I honeymooned with my love.  It's where I fell in love with sea glass.  It's where I have watched my kids, and their cousins, year and after, learn to ride the waves on their boogy boards and find sea stars and shells. 
 
We had planned another fall trip for November with the kids for the day, but now, we can't even get on the island.  I'd love to go and help, but I think they are still months away from that. 
 
The end of the island, where the last few pictures are from, Holgate, is our favorite part of the island.  I heard it got hit hard.  There is apparently an entirely new inlet at the end, from erosion. 
 
The pics of peoples homes broken to pieces, and washed away, or just sitting under water is heartbreaking.  I still haven't heard from friends on the island, and pray they are well. I am sure, they probably just don't want to talk about it right now.  Their world has just been turned upside down.
 
Here are some pics of Holgate after the storm.   (from site http://photos.nj.com/star-ledger/2012/10/13_ga1101storm_murray_1.html
 

 
The dunes completely washed into the street.  Look how deep the sand is on the main road.
 
 
Here are the houses on the main road, as you drive to Holgate.  There used to be dunes behind them, and they had first floors and driveways.  The driveways were sloped because the houses were built up on the dunes, but the dunes have washed out flat, across the main street.  I wish I had a before pic, other then just in my mind.
 
Heartbreaking.
 
Here in Pennsburg Pa, we fared well.  We got high winds, lost power, and had lots of tree's down, and transformer fires, but all in all, compared to the coast, we did ok. 
 
We were blessed to borrow a generator. I would just like to say, how very thankful I am, that we heeded warnings, and prepared for this storm.  We didn't for Irene, and we were lucky it wasn't bad.  But this storm, it WAS bad.  Worst we've seen.  We filled the bathtub and 12 spackle buckets with water to flush the toilets (soooooo thankful we did that- and we still had to refill them), we filled all our pitchers and such with water, bought some water, had lots of easy to make and eat food on hand, bought baby wipes for dirty hands and faces, fill basins with washing water for hands, lots of sanitizer, extension cords and power strips, batteries for flashlights and lanterns, glow sticks for the kids to take to bed (since they'd have no nightlights) and candles and an oil lamp.  Even with the generator, we could only run one light at night, so it was still pretty dark.  I learned after the first day, all chores and dinner had to be done before 4, or it was too dark in the house to cook and clean up.  We put glow bracelets on power cords that ran everywhere so no one would trip over them in the middle of the night.  (see pic below of the mess of cords)
 


 
 
5 days without power.  It was crazy.  3 Kids, my mom, two dogs, a parrot, Justin and me, in a house, for days........LOL!  No one slept much, especially that first night.  The kids camped out with my mom in the family room.  They were scared.  Then Justin and I were up and down the steps all night filling and checking the generator and sump pumps.  However, after a couple days, I got into the swing of things.  Justin was exhausted, he didn't stop all week. If he wasn't running, checking or fixing something here, he was helping the neighbors out.  We were really blessed.  My sister in law had power, so we showered there, and I could wash dishes too. I re-filled our washing water there each day too.  My back is happy I don't have to do that anymore though.  (it was nice to have a reason to visit my sis in law each day though)
 (my portable dishwasher)
 
 
 
The craziest part for me, was when the power did go out during the storm.  We knew it was coming.  The winds were just too high, it was only a matter of time.  When it went, the whole town seemed to go down at once.  We went out into the storm, in the pitch black, to hook up the generator.  The winds were howling, rain was pelting us, branches were coming down, and I was tripping over them in the driveway, as we tried to hook everything up by flashlight.  Sirens were going off all over town......it was so surreal.  It really made me appreciate the workers who go out in the storm, saving lives.   It was amazing and humbling.  Such a small and helpless feeling being out in a hurricane.  I understand why people try to go to the beach to see the waves, or go out in the storm to experience it.  It brings you back down to earth, back to reality.  We live in a world, of movies, and computers, and create our own reality, and we often forget, how absolutely powerless we truly are.  Standing out in a storm like this, will quickly remind us, of this great big world we live in. 
 
Now that the power is back on, life goes on.  Kids are back to school after missing a week.  Halloween was canceled.  Though thankfully, it was re-scheduled for Saturday, and they kids got to go out with their cousins, and we got to hang with my sis-in-law and her family.  It was a much needed night of fun and candy, after a rough week.

 
The Boy were the LMFAO dance crew- I carried my ipod and played Party Rockin while they danced for candy.  What  riot!  Julia was a cat.  She stayed in character for every picture!!!!
 
Here was our trick or treat crew.


And the post candy eating dance party!




My sister in law- most fun Aunt Ever!
 
I was sad to have missed Dia de los Muertos.    I really wanted to have a whole batch of sugar skull beads for you guys.  I still plan to make them, even made another stamp too.  Just need some time to catch up. In the meantime, I have a 20% off sale going on in both shops until Wednesday.  Use code dayofthedead20 in either shop to save. 
 
 
 
 
I hope you all fared well.  Please keep the rescue and rebuilding crews, and those who lost their homes and neighborhoods,  in your thoughts and prayers.  The jersey shore and new york have a long way to go before they can get back to normal.