I'm looking forward to showing my new jewelry designs at two (!) craft shows this week. I've been playing around with my swirl pendants in fine silver clay, changing the regular loops into a more freeform design that wraps around the necklace like a vine. At least that's the idea - some have come out better than others.
The wonderful women in the MDI Rotary Club have put together a jewelry party, "Baubles and Gems," to raise money for Rotary International's effort to eradicate polio in the four countries where it is still endemic. Thanks to innkeeper Michelle, this fun evening is going to be held on Tuesday, November 29 from 5 to 7 at the Holbrook House Inn in Bar Harbor. Kim Harty and I, both Rotarians, will show our work, and we've invited other artisans to participate: Vicky Fernald, Linda Perrin, and Sydney Roberts Rockefeller. Benni McMullen is is also contributing vintage jewelry from her mother's estate. We're all donating 15% of our proceeds to the polio campaign.
On Friday and Saturday, December 2 and 3, the annual Island Arts Association Holiday Fair will be held at Atlantic Oceanside. This was my first attempt at a craft show in 2009 and I've loved doing them ever since. The IAA holiday fair is a terrific show with a variety of crafts in all media. An MDI holiday tradition, it attracts a good crowd of shoppers who are looking for unique, locally crafted gifts at reasonable prices. The IAA is a great community of crafters, all willing to help each other, and backed by the seemingly tireless staff of the YWCA, Benni McMullen and Abby Robinson.
Welcome to Beads of Eden!
Welcome to Sharon Broom's blog for Beads of Eden, a home-based business in Bar Harbor, Maine. I create jewelry using high quality materials such as gemstones, freshwater pearls and fine silver. Much of my work features fine silver pendants and beads that I've crafted by hand. My goal is to offer jewelry that is simple, distinctive and affordable - pieces that you will want to wear often instead of stowing them away in a drawer. To see samples of my work, click on "Photos of my jewelry" below. All of these pieces are either available for sale, or examples of jewelry I can create for you using similar materials. You can also check out my work for sale at my Beads of Eden site on etsy.com - just click on the Etsy link under My Etsy Mini (below, right).
Sunday, November 27, 2011
Sunday, September 4, 2011
A (Craft) Fair Day on Bar Harbor's Village Green
Yesterday (September 3) brought perfect weather for the craft fair on Bar Harbor's Village Green. The Green's walkways were lined with Island Arts Association members (like me) and other area artisans selling all kinds of crafts. Labor Day Weekend brought a crowd of people "from away" who wanted to buy locally-created gifts to take home. Some interesting conversations: "I've been seeing a lot of signs for sea glass. What is it? We don't have it in Key West." People who had just come from the YWCA's whoopie pie contest down the street described the various entries:: "One batch was made with red wine!" Many friends stopped by, and there was just about every breed of dog imaginable lounging with their humans. My new PMC silver pieces - "scroll" pendants and "swirly" pendants - got a lot of nice compliments and some of them found new homes. Truthfully, our golden retriever, Eden - who is my business's namesake as well as my greeter and customer service representative - got more attention, which is never surprising. (See photo.) Having finished the new pieces the night before the fair, I haven't had a chance to get them photographed and posted on Etsy, so that's high on my to-do list.
Today I had a wonderful experience, taking a ride on Seal Cove Road in a 1911 Stanley Steamer. The Seal Cove Auto Museum held a "steamer" day featuring expert Sue Davis giving talks, tours, demonstrations and rides. Sue founded the Stanley Museum in Kingfield, ME, and probably knows more about Stanleys than anyone else alive. The Seal Cove museum has a stellar collection of Brass Era autos - elegant vehicles from 1896 to 1926 - and terrific programs to go with them. People like me who are most definitely not car people can find much to enjoy from the standpoint of turn-of-the-century history and culture. Plus the autos are simply gorgeous.
Today I had a wonderful experience, taking a ride on Seal Cove Road in a 1911 Stanley Steamer. The Seal Cove Auto Museum held a "steamer" day featuring expert Sue Davis giving talks, tours, demonstrations and rides. Sue founded the Stanley Museum in Kingfield, ME, and probably knows more about Stanleys than anyone else alive. The Seal Cove museum has a stellar collection of Brass Era autos - elegant vehicles from 1896 to 1926 - and terrific programs to go with them. People like me who are most definitely not car people can find much to enjoy from the standpoint of turn-of-the-century history and culture. Plus the autos are simply gorgeous.
Saturday, August 13, 2011
PMC and more PMC
I used to hear crafters talk about being "addicted" to Precious Metal Clay silver. After working with this terrific medium for a few months, I'm devoting more and more time to it and love its versatility. Now, will someone please invent a PMC silver that doesn't cost the Earth? I've tried bronze clay, which costs about 1/9 as much as silver. It's fun, too, but it doesn't have the creamy feel of silver clay and isn't as easy to work with. And for my taste, it just doesn't have the beauty of silver. I'm experimenting with pieces that use less silver clay but still have the impact I'm looking for. Also, I'm creating barrel beads and other elements that enhance gemstones so I can go back to working more with color.
It has been a good summer. I had a brooch in the Alone Moose Gallery's 36th summer show of "36 Brooches." What a fun exhibit! All were crafted by artists from this area and the variety was wonderful. I also had a pendant/brooch in the Friends of Acadia Benefit Auction. My next show is the Island Arts Association craft fair on the Village Green in Bar Harbor on Saturday, September 3 - with good weather, and huge crowds of people in town, it will be a great show.
It has been a good summer. I had a brooch in the Alone Moose Gallery's 36th summer show of "36 Brooches." What a fun exhibit! All were crafted by artists from this area and the variety was wonderful. I also had a pendant/brooch in the Friends of Acadia Benefit Auction. My next show is the Island Arts Association craft fair on the Village Green in Bar Harbor on Saturday, September 3 - with good weather, and huge crowds of people in town, it will be a great show.
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Hill Tribe Silver
When it comes to silver beads, Thai Hill Tribe silver is the most addictive. This beautiful work is handcrafted by people of several tribes in Northern Thailand, who have a long cultural tradition of working with silver. In modern times they have been encouraged to develop their silver craft as a source of income. The quality of the silver is very high -95%-99% pure silver as compared to sterling, which is 92.5%. Hill Tribe silver is softer and easier to shape, so it is available in an incredible variety of designs. It can be etched, printed, hammered, scratched or folded like origami. Many beads and pendants are inspired by flora and fauna, but others are more abstract and some reflect tribal traditions. I find that by adding just a few elements of Hill Tribe silver to the natural gemstones in my designs, I can create very distinctive jewelry. It is such a pleasure to work with!
Monday, February 21, 2011
I've loved jewelry for as long as I can remember. Every time I go to a craft gallery, museum shop or craft show, I head straight for the jewelry cases. (If time and energy permit, I might check out something else.) Jewelry to me is like works of art that you can wear. A few years ago, a friend and I were visiting a gallery and drooling (quite literally) over some gorgeous and expensive necklaces. She had been making jewelry for a while and she pointed out that although the materials and designs were really special, the construction was pretty simple - something that either of us could do. A few months later, she took me to a bead shop for the first time. After three hours I was still wandering around in a daze. So many options! Thanks to her teaching, I started making a few things using beads from old necklaces that I took apart. As I became more confident, I started buying new beads and gradually using finer materials. At some point I discovered Etsy as an online source for an incredible variety of beads at reasonable prices. But there's nothing more fun than exploring bead stores, checking out the shops as I travel to other towns and states. I had a wonderful experience last November when I visited the Bead Museum in Glendale, AZ, with beads from every place and time! (Did you know there is a natural blue coral?) Sadly, I just learned that the museum is closing and the collection is being transferred to the Mingei International Museum in San Diego, where it will join a fine collection of folk art, craft and design.
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