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Shannon's Beadwork


I play with beads. I've been playing with beads for six or seven years now, off and on. I began to get seriously interested when a bead shop, The Original Ornament, opened up on a street next to my university. It's moved since, but I still browse there every once in a while. (I purchase most of my beads off eBay these days.)

Anyway, here are some of the pieces I've made. Most are keepers I've done for myself, but a few may go to auction at eBay or at various charity auctions in the area. If you're seriously interested in me making something for you, email me. At this point I'm likely to do it for the cost of materials and delivery with an extra couple of bucks for buying more beads.


These are two of my early necklaces. The longer one is one I pieced together from a mixed bag of stones I had had for years, source unknown. I added fake pearls (source also unknown), silver flower-shaped spacers and silver seed beads. The silver is probably from the Original Ornament. It's strung on tigertail with butterfly clasps. One thing I still have to learn is how to finish a necklace without a clasp of any kind. This necklace is around 28 inches.

The shorter one uses cheap hollow silver scrolled beads, plastic jewel-toned bars, and clear quartz rondelles. I think all these were found at a Michael's. It's about 18 inches.







This is one of my favorite pieces. I got the purple glass disks at the Original Ornament, along with the small purple crystal beads. I just started playing one day, trying them with the large stash of fake pearls I had and some clear seed beads...and suddenly I had a great necklace. This one is long, maybe 30 inches, but once again, it's got a clasp. This is strung on tigertail.











This is another of my what-have-I-got-a-lot-of projects. I had a large number of inexpensive glass beads from Michael's, and I wanted to empty my bead case. I made a few pairs of earrings and three or four necklaces. I kept this one because it happened to go well with a favorite dress. It uses the smaller of the glass beads and I threw in some silver spacers from the Original Ornament, strung on tigertail. It's about 16 inches, designed to be almost a choker.







This necklace was an early experiment in using silk cord instead of wire. I used blue glass beads, some Czech glass and some cubes, and clear quartz crystal cubes on white silk cord, knotted between each bead. The center bead is a heavy silver Celtic knotwork bead I only had one of at the time. The necklace is about 16 inches long.

The earrings are hollow metal, painted blue with kanji from one of the Asian languages on both sides, and silver seed beads on sterling wires and hooks.







The bottom necklace is a long (26 inches) tigertail piece, using purple and clear glass cubes with clear mirrored seed beads, all from the Original Ornament. I plan to restring this one on silk and get rid of the butterfly clasps so it will drape better.

The top necklace is another learning-to-knot project of amethyst ovals (from eBay) and tiny gray pearls (Original Ornament). It's about 20 inches long on gray silk cord.

The earrings are a quickie of two purple Swarovski crystals each with a larger silver spacer bead in between.







One visit to the Original Ornament, I bought several tubes of Miyuki glass beads because I liked the color. I wound up making four or five long necklaces from them on tigertail, some in blue and gold and others in green and gold. I gave most of them away as gifts one Christmas but kept this one. This is another future restringing project, perhaps onto silk cord or perhaps just to eliminate the clasps.







This necklace is a copy from something I saw in a catalog. I took silver seed beads, large tourmaline ovals, and smaller various leftover rounds: clear quartz, amethyst, citrine, green jade or aventurine, red garnet. It turned out rather well, though I would prefer to restring it onto silk cord instead of tigertail.

The earrings are various results from my grab-bag. I'll often browse the Original Ornament and get 2-4 of some interesting beads and later on do a slew of earrings. Starting with the pair on the far left and going clockwise: blue-and-amber glass beads, smoky quartz and clear Swarovski facets, Indian silver and blue glass, more smoky quartz with silver spacers, blue sandstone and silver fluted spacers, and clear quartz with garnets and silver fluted spacers.




I was really beginning to get used to knotting on silk with this piece. I had some green glass, some larger purple glass, some quartz rounds, and plenty of silver spacers. I also had those three round Celtic knotwork silver beads, one with an odd configuration to its holes. I played around and came up with this necklace on white silk cord.

The earrings were a happy accident. I'd made them from two of the three rectangular Celtic kntowork beads (see the blue necklace above for the other) and green glass rondelles. They were in a box with a lot of other earrings for the longest time, until I cleaned out a craft bag I'd forgotten about. And there they were, the perfect earrings to go with this necklace!




OK, a lot here. The bracelet is inspired from pieces I saw in the Femail Creations catalog. I couldn't afford the $150 they were asking for, but I found some of the sterling word stone charms (Pathways of the Heart, apparently no longer in business) in a shop in Greensboro on State Street. From there it was a matter of putting together some spare silver chain, some purple glass and quartz round beads on wire to dangle like charms, and the word beads. I get a lot of comments on this bracelet, and have managed to make two others like it since when I luck across the word beads.

The earrings on the left are purple glass and clear quartz; on the right are amethyst rounds and marcasite-studded silver cylinders.




The above necklace and this one are copies of a design I found in a catalog. The catalog wanted hundreds of dollars that I didn't have, so I went to work, having learned the basics of hand-knotting.

These necklaces are strung on beige silk cord, with clear spaces between beads or pairs of beads. They both use mostly tourmaline. The above one also has quartz cubes and rounds and some purple glass beads. The one to the left has quartz ovals, green glass, and freshwater pearls. I kept the one above; the one to the left was donated to my school's charity auction, where it fetched at least $60 (that was the point where the parent who told me dropped out).






Maybe you get the idea that I really like this design. I do.

This one is closer to the catalog piece, using freshwater pearls, iolite ovals and bricks, amethyst ovals and rounds, and one hematite star. I strung this one on lavender silk cord and made it longer than the tourmaline ones. Those are 16 inches, made to rest at the base of the neck. This one is about 22 inches.

By this time, I was buying most of my supplies off eBay.







                These are two of this year's donations to the charity auction. There are two of the gold necklace going and a word-bead bracelet with lavender jade accents that I didn't photograph before I delivered them.

The gold is four strands of seed beads, interspersed with clear seed beads and the occasional gold-plated round. They are strung on coated twine and gathered in sterling-silver cones. I did two of these for the auction.

The purple is another of the spaced-out silk creations, using freshwater pearls, amethyst ovals, and fluorite rounds, all on gray silk cord. This one is about 18 inches long and is my last auction piece this year.






All images copyright Shannon Sudderth, 2004. Ask permission if you wish to use them.