Wow - This was my first Bead Soup Challenge, first time I have ever done anything like this, and it was fun, but it was a true challenge. I taught myself some new techniques, and the following is a LONG, detailed account of my journey from beginning to end:
These are the beads I received from my delightful BSBP (Bead Soup Blog Party) partner, Tammy Jones:
I'll be breaking this beautiful assortment down individually, and trying to describe my creative process as I looked at the mix, and at the individual components, but as you can see in the above picture, I received a lot of beads, in various sizes, shapes, textures, and colors. The mix includes various turquoise nuggets in different shades and shapes, 4 irregular red bamboo coral nuggets, 11 irregular orange sponge coral nuggets, 2 larger irregular orange sponge coral nuggets, 10 faceted aventurine rounds, a very long strand of turquoise-colored glass beads, a silver toggle, and a large carnelian ring.
Before I get into the nitty gritty, I want to go ahead and reveal a grouped photo of all the pieces I created from Tammy's beads. I normally would save this for the end, but this was a really long process for me, so this is a long post, and I know folks are hopping around trying to see everyone's pretties, and some people won't have the patience for all my ramblings! So here they are:
2 necklaces, a bracelet, and a pair of earrings. Some of the jewelry-making techniques I used in my collection include:
- Beadweaving: tubular peyote, circular peyote, herringbone, and netting
- Wire and Metal Work
- Stringing
If you want the gory details, stay tuned!! And at the end of this post, you'll find links to all the BSBP participants, to help you with your blog hopping and commenting.
According to the
BSBP rules, I had to use the focal and the clasp I received; the use of any of the other beads I received was optional, and I was to incorporate beads from my own stash in my design. So I decided the best place to start designing was with the focal!
And obviously, some of the steps in this process overlap each other, because several ideas would suddenly occur to me at once.
This is a close up of the large carnelian ring I received. It is 2-1/4 inches in diameter, and has holes on either side.
Now I love to make big jewelry, but even for me this was a big focal piece. And to be honest, it was a little confounding, because while I have worked with donuts before, and this ring is essentially a big, drilled donut, I kept looking at it, and looking at the rest of the beads Tammy sent me, and drawing a blank. Do I string beads through the middle of the carnelian ring? Do I just wrap around either side of it, and leave the middle empty? Do I weave some sort of bail for it, and dangle something from the bottom hole? What to do, what to do?
And I kept looking at all the beads I'd received, and trying to pair them with the carnelian ring, and with each other, and trying to decide if the ring should just be center of a big multistranded soup necklace, or what?
After several days of pondering, and drawing, and thinking, and sketching, I finally decided that I couldn't figure out a way to incorporate all these beads into ONE finished design. It was making my head hurt! So I decided to let go, and focus on just a few of the beads I'd received.
I was drawn to these faceted aventurine beads, and really wanted to incorporate them into my piece. So I put them next to the carnelian ring, and pondered and sketched some more.
I starting rummaging through my OWN stash of beads, and pulling things I liked with the aventurine.
And I looked at the toggle, which I knew I had to use, and I just felt that proportionally, it was too small for anything I was coming up with for the carnelian ring.
It was at about this time, staring at the aventurine, staring at the carnelian ring, and looking at the beads I had pulled from my own stash, that I knew I really wanted to focus on the calming green colors that Tammy had sent me, like the aventurine and the strand of small turquoise-colored glass beads. I starting thinking even further outside my box, and a thought occurred to me: "What if I camouflage the carnelian ring, so it still serves as the focal, and yet is
green?" How would I even do this?
I thought about wrapping it in green satin ribbon, or leather. Unh-uh.
Then I looked at my Delicas, and found the perfect color of aventurine green. But how do I stitch them onto the ring so that it is still usable as a focal? I knew peyote was the only stitch that would cover the carnelian evenly enough that no orange would show through. But how to envelope the carnelian ring in peyote? So I just decided to give it a try.
This was a critical juncture. I liked the stitching, and decided to continue encircling the ring with seafoam green delicas in a tight peyote stitch. But I had to decide what to do about the holes in the carnelian ring. Do I just stitch over them? If I do, I limit the ways I can use the focal when I finish stitching (and yes, I still had not come up with my "vision").
Or should I put headpins in them as placeholders, so that if I want wrapped loops on my finished ring, I'll be able to make them. And if I decide I don't want wrapped loops later in the process, I can always clip them off. But if I don't put them in, there's no going back and adding them through this tight stitch!
And if I go the headpin route, what metal do I use? Because THAT determines my clasp. Period.
I had pulled a couple of strands of pearls that I really liked with the aventurine - one was a beautiful ecru small keishe pearl that I actually ended up using in this finished piece, and the other was an incredible coppery-bronzy larger keishe, that had shades of orange, and went beautifully with the sponge coral. And at this stage, I didn't want to rule out the addition of some of Tammy's coral beads to this finished piece. I preferred Vintaj Natural Brass to silver when looking at all these beads together: the 2 strands of pearls, the long strand of turquoise-colored glass beads, the aventurine, and the sponge coral. So I grabbed 2 long Vintaj Natural Brass headpins, shoved them through the holes in the carnelian ring as placeholders, and kept stitching. And boy, did those headpins complicate the stitching.
At about the point you see in the pic above, the peyote tube I was stitching quit turning freely around the carnelian ring, because the stitched tube was starting to curve too much, and glass doesn't bend very well! So I was already starting to have to pass my needle and thread through the ring with each pass of a bead so I didn't have thread wrapped around the ring. And with the addition of the headpins, that thread started to catch on something or other with every pass. Oh well, one must suffer for one's art, I guess.
Finished ring, with headpins still protruding. You can sort of still see the carnelian between my stitches at the bottom edge of the ring.
Side view of the ring, clearing showing the underlying carnelian between my stitches. Those are actually transparent Delicas, too, so while they block part of the underlying ring from showing,
it's not really completely hidden. Just camouflaged!
Time to ponder some more. I looked at that great expanse of (now green) focal ring, and tried to come up with a design. I drew it as a center focal, with multiple strands coming off the wrapped loops I could create on each side. I drew it as an asymmetrical side focal, with multiple strands coming from the bottom wrapped loop, draping gracefully down and then up to the back, while a single chain came from the top wrapped loop to meet the other strands in the back. I drew some other stuff. But I was unhappy with everything, because even though my focal was green, it was still big, and it was plain, and it was taking up a lot of space.
Oooooh! I had a thought! What if I
embellish the ring? I think I might have started to drool. Because I
LOVE to embellish! In fact,
they don't call me "the Queen of Embellishing" for nothing!
Here was my initial, simple thought: "How do I get some beads on this tightly stitched ring in a way that will attractively fill the dead space, and what beads do I use?" As I say all the time, "so many beads, so little time."
I carried my green ring around, looking at all my seed beads, and discovered that I had some Tilas that were a terrific match for both the green and the bronze. And I love Tilas.
I had my coral beads in the back of my head, and I knew I was now going to create Tila Flowers, one of my favorite ways to use Tilas, so I rummaged through my personal bead stash, looking for some smaller coral or red beads that matched.
I found some round, bright red bamboo coral 6mm beads, perfect for the flower centers.
I found some bright red Czech fire-polished crystals for the "petals".
And I filled in the rest of the flower pattern with bronze seed beads, teal seed beads, coral-red Delicas, and those turquoise-colored glass beads Tammy sent me.
I had initially thought these beads were turquoise, but when I took some off the strand, they reminded me a lot of size 6 seed beads. A LOT. They were a little irregular in shape and length, but they acted like size 6 Czech seed beads, and so I decided to treat them like size 6 seed beads.
And then I got curious, and decided to sacrifice one (since I had hundreds and hundreds of them), and I tapped it with a hammer, and sure enough, these beads were glass! Not that it mattered - I had already decided to use them as seed beads, but I was kind of pleased with my bead diagnostics!
So here is the first flower I made, threads still attached, awaiting my next move.
I love how it matched the ring, and envisioned 5 of these flowers covering more than half of the ring, overlapping each other and filling most of the hole in the middle of the green ring. So I stitched up 4 more flowers.
And then came the day I had dreaded: attaching the woven flowers to the ring, I knew this would not be easy. The green delicas were sewn so tightly, and so close to the carnelian, and many of them had multiple thread passes through them, so it was a bit of challenge, and a feat of engineering!
But it turned out just as I planned it, and I love the result. It is a big, structural focal piece, measuring 3-5/8 inches from top to bottom, and while you can still see the green ring, it is no longer a big, boring, dead space - it is a focal attraction! It calls attention to itself.
Meaning the rest of the necklace needs to be subtle. NOT my strong point.
Back of the ring, showing how my flowers even hide my wrapped loops.
Clearly this ring is too big to support a single strand necklace, and I had basically known from the beginning that I was working toward a multistrand result.
And now I have a side focal piece, so the question was how to bring the strands up to a clasp, and what kind of clasp? Something simple in the back, so as not to detract from the focal? Or something on the opposite side of the necklace, to balance the focal and allow for the placement of the strands, which otherwise would have to start clumping together when they reached the neck, and that's never comfortable.
And just when I was making my decision, my friend,
Sonya, came in wearing a necklace she had just made, using a pattern in the Bead & Button Fall 2011 issue of WireWork. I loved the connectors on her necklace, so I decided to adapt them into a clasp, using Vintaj Natural Brass.
The largest Vintaj Natural Brass wire I had was 18g, which I hammered flat, leaving a nice textured look, but when I finished it felt a little flimsy to work as a clasp, so I tumbled it for a loooong time, but never really got the hardness I wanted. So I decided to make 2 identical clasps from the 18g wire and then wire them together, for a thicker, stronger piece. Simple, huh?
If you said "yes," you have clearly never worked much with wire!
It took hours and hours to get 2 pieces of wire to bend identically, to my satisfaction. Once I did, I hammered them, then wrapped them together with more Vintaj Natural Brass Wire, adding a couple of my BSBP aventurine beads in the curves.
Then I formed an S-hook from the 18g Vintaj Natural Brass wire, and cut some large jumprings for the S-hook to go into, so that the large S-hook and the large clasp would both lie flat. And the 18g jumprings weren't sturdy enough, so I wired a couple of them together, and finally added an aventurine and freshwater pearl dangle (from my own stash) to the tip of the S-hook. Clasp complete!
I used Vintaj Natural Brass chain to connect the focal ring and the clasp together around the neck.
On to the strands!
The 1st strand was a cake walk. I knew I wanted to use the faceted aventurine, and I had some delicate Vintaj Natural Brass chain, so I used some Vintaj Natural Brass headpins to make aventurine dangles, spread out over the length of the chain from focal to clasp, with a nice soft drape. This look, all by itself, was wonderful, and would have been a great finished necklace, except the strand literally wasn't heavy enough to balance the clasp and the focal, and I wanted to add more beads anyway! So on to strand 2!
If you remember, MY challenge with these strands was to be subtle, because I already had a focal that commanded attention, and couldn't really afford to be busy in the strands. So I added a simple, unadorned piece of Vintaj Natural Brass as strand 2.
For strand 3, I had always envisioned a delicate beadwoven rope, using the turquoise-colored Czech seed beads Tammy sent me. Here they are again:
I thought about a spiral, or a Russian Spiral, or even tubular herringbone, but they all seemed too...something. Either too big, or to busy, or I didn't have the right matching bead. Something.
So what does a crazy person do when working against a deadline? She decides to learn a brand NEW stitch, one that she has always and forever sworn NEVER to learn, because every time she reads instructions for it, she gets a headache. And what is this delightful stitch? Netting.
I found a pattern with instructions, chose a size 15 seed bead then went with my design, and took everything home for the weekend. And spent 3 days trying to figure it out. But I finally got it. (HINT: doing the same, wrong thing over and over again will never have a different result, and will never turn out right. Feel free quote me on that. LOL)
And I couldn't be happier with the result! It's the perfect size for this design.
Next? Strand 4. I used the ecru keishe pearls I had chosen from my stash, and added a few teal Czech fire-polished crystals for a little color balance.
Next? Strand 5. I strung Tammy's smaller sponge coral nuggets with my copper-colored large keishe pearls, and held it up to the already 4-strand necklace. And it looked fine, but when I took it away, I realized the necklace was better without this 5th strand. It was just too much. But I liked the strand, so I set it aside.
One BSBP project complete!
Project 2: I decided to use these 2 larger nuggets of sponge coral for a pair of earrings.
I added some of the copper-colored keishe pearls, and the last 2 adventurine beads I received in the swap.
Project 3: Here are those smaller sponge coral nuggets that I almost added as part of a 5th strand for my 1st necklace:
As I said earlier, I had already strung them with those luscious copper-colored freshwater pearls, and loved the result. So I made it longer, and decided to add a Swarovski Cosmic Ring as a focal. I stitched up a square stitch bail using copper-colored Delicas for the Cosmic Ring, restrung the pearls and sponge coral, and had one piece of sponge coral left, so I added it to the Vintaj Natural Brass chain extender in the back of the necklace as a dangle (trust me, it's back there!)
I am really happy with this necklace!
So, 3 projects done, and I have a lot of turquoise and bamboo coral left. And I still have a silver toggle to use.
Interestingly, 2 of these nuggets are drilled through the long side, and 2 are drilled through the short side. For a little added degree of difficulty.
I went a little
Project Runway about now. My head was all "But what about the cohesiveness of your collection? You, are OUT!! Auf Wiedersehen!" I love bamboo coral, turquoise, and silver together, Heidi, but I have used all this Vintaj Natural Brass everywhere else! But then I slapped myself, and got down to business.
While digging through my box of personal bead soup, I had set aside everything turquoise and coral, and I also found a large piece of bamboo coral, so my first thought was "Cha-Cha". After all, I love the embellishing!
I made lots and lots of dangles for this bracelet, using sterling silver rolo chain as the base. I put the large piece of bamboo coral in the center as a focal, and the 2 pieces that are drilled through their long sides lie between the focal piece and the clasp. I hung all the dangles, and then had to make more dangles, because there were dangle-free spots, in my opinion. And you can't really have too many dangles! Even the 2 left-over bamboo coral nuggets from Tammy were turned into dangles.
Once done to my satisfaction, the large bamboo coral focal piece looked a little bare, so I used 16g sterling silver wire to create a hammered curlicue, and attached it to the focal bead.
One side...
and the other side of the Cha-cha bracelet.
The silver toggle clasp, and its own dangle.
So here is my complete collection again.
Thanks for reading all of this (if you did), and I hope you'll leave some comments!
This was a lot of fun, and a huge challenge for me, and I want to thank
Lori Anderson for all her hard work and communications in getting this endeavor organized, and for the opportunity to participate.
These are the beads I sent my BSBP partner, Tammy. Tammy is the editor of
Jewelry Making Daily, and can also be found on
Facebook. It has been wonderful working with her and getting to know her, and I can't wait to see what she makes with my beads! Please visit her blog and take a look!
If you want to visit some of the talented folks participating in BSBP, here is a complete, semi-alphabetical list, broken up into small of 10 pairs to make it seem a little more manageable! {I'm all the way down at #177!} As a matter of fact,
I strongly recommend you give us "bottom-dwellers" (bottom of the list, that is) a fair shake, and start at the bottom of the list for your blog hopping!!
We know you can't visit all of us in one day! But maybe you can visit a few of us each day for the next week or two. I'm sure you will see some amazing designs, and you might even learn some neat stuff!
The Hostess,
Lori Anderson and her partner,
Manuela Wutschke
1.
Aimee Wheaton and
Barbara York
2.
Alice Craddick and
Sandra Richardson
3.
Alison Sachs and
Amy Severino
4.
Allison Scott and
Cynthia Abner
5.
Amanda Cargill Austin and
Charlene Sevier
6.
Amanda Davie and
Patsy Evins
7.
Amber Dawn and
Kim Ballor
8.
Ambra Gostoli and
Christine Hansen
9.
Amy Freeland and
Christine Altmiller
10.
Ana Krepel-Novak and
Eleanor Snare
11.
Andrea Morici and
Hope Smitherman
12.
Andrea Trank and
Jayne Capps
13.
Andrea Turini and
Charlene Jacka
14.
Angela May and
Emanda Johnson
15.
Anitra Gordy and
Elizabeth Owens Dwy
16.
Ann Rishell and
Debbie Price
17.
Ann Sherwood and
Lynne Bowland
18.
Anna Lear and
Barbe Saint John
19.
Anna Sabina and and
Erin Siegel
19.
Nan Emmett and
Erin Siegel
20.
Astrid Boyce and
Birgitta Lejonklou
21.
B.R. Kuhlman and
Deanna Chase
22.
Barbara Bechtel and
Bryna Lumb
23.
Barbara Blaszczyk and
DaviniaDesign
24.
Barbara Judy and
Holly Westfall
25.
Barbara Lewis and
Cathie Carroll
26.
Barrie Edwards and
Lyn Foley
27.
Becky Fairclough and
Jana Tarhala
28.
Bella Borgouise and
Gillian Lehman
29.
Beth and Evie McCord and
Erin Prais-Hintz
30.
Beth Bricker and
Heather Pyle
31.
Beth Emery and
Cassie Donlen
32.
Bobbie Rafferty and
Cindy Cima Edwards
33.
Candice McGinnis and
Sally Anderson
34.
Carol Bradley and
Cece Cormier
35.
Cathy Khoury and
Molly Alexander
36.
Carol Tannahill and
Hilary Frye
37.
Carrie Tahquechi and
Cris Peacock
38.
Cat Pruitt and
Cindy Gimbrone
39.
Charlene Gary and
Doris Stumpf
40.
Charlotte Pevny and
Kate Gardenghi
41.
Cherrie Fick and
Cathie Carroll
41.
Claire Maunsell and
Cherrie Fick
42.
Cheryl Roe and
Jenny Vidberg
43.
Chris White and
Norma Turvey
44.
Christa Murphy and
Kathy Alderfer
45.
Christie Murrow and
Dana James
46.
Christina Miles and
Collette Collins
47.
Christine Brandel and
Elizabeth Woodford
48.
Christine Damm and
Cynthia Deis
49.
Christine Hendrickson and
Debbie Goering
50.
Christine Stonefield and
Dee Wingrove-Smith
51.
Cilla Watkins and
Johanna Rhodes
52.
Cindy Wimmer and
Riki Schumacher
53.
CJ Baushka and
Cory Celaya
54.
Courtney Breul and
Joanna Matuszczyk
55.
Cristi Clothier and
Kathleen Robinson Young
56.
Cryss Thain and
Serena Trent
57.
Cynthia Tucker and
Kitty Durmaj
58.
Dana Johnson Jones and
Eva Sherman
59.
Davinia Algeri and
Janet McDonald
60.
Deci Worland and
Lara Lutrick
61.
Diana Ptaszynski and
Kristy Abner
62.
Diane Cook and
Kerry Bogert
63.
Diane Hawkey and
Jen Judd Velasquez
64.
Dorcas Midkiff and
Jill Harris
65.
Doris Radlicki and
Heather Goldsmith
66.
Dot Lewallen and
Gaea Cannaday
67.
Elisabeth Auld and
Jennifer Justman
68.
Erin Fickert-Rowland and
Geanina Grigore
69.
Erin Grant and
Julie Jones
70.
Eszter Czibulyas and
Helena Fritz
71.
Fiona Christie and
Michelle Heim
72.
Gail Zwang and
Genea Crivello-Knable
73.
Geneva Collins and
Jana Haag
74.
Gretchen Nation and
Heidi Post
75.
Heather DeSimone and
Karin Slaton
76.
Heather Marley and
Terry Carter
77.
Ingrid McCue and
Jennifer Pride
78.
Jackie Ryan and
Nicole Keller
79.
Janna Harttgen and
Joanne Tinley
80.
Jean Yates and
Lori Anderson
81.
Jelveh Jaferian and
Jenny Davies-Reazor
82.
Jenni Connolly and
Jennifer Heynen
83.
Jennifer Cameron and
Kristi Bowman
84.
Jennifer Geldard and
Lisa Liddy
85.
Jennifer VanBenschoten and
Kim Hora
86.
Jess Italia Lincoln and
Lori Greenberg
87.
Jill MacKay and
Lori Bergmann
88.
JJ Jacobs and
Karen Tremblay
89.
Joyce Becker and
Kathy Welsh
90.
Judy Glende and
Karen Sinkowski
91.
Judy Riley and
Kelly Morgan
92.
JuLee Wolfe and
Julie Bean
93.
Julianna Cannon and
Julianna Kis
94.
Julie Nordine and
Lesley Watt
95.
K. Hutchinson and
Shea Zukowski
96.
Karen Firnberg and
Karyn Bonfiglio
97.
Karen Williams and
Kimberly Roberts
98.
Karen Zanco and
Polly Barker
99.
Kari Carrigan and
Laura Twiford
100.
Karin von Hoeren and
Laura Blanck
101.
Kate Richbourg and
Lorelei Eurto
102.
Kathleen Lange Klik and
Maria Clark
103.
Kathy Engstrom and
Keri Lee Sereika
104.
Kay Thomerson and
Loretta Carstensen
105.
Kelley Fogle and
Laurel Bielec
106.
Kelly Ramstack and
Sally Anderson
107.
Kim Stevens and
Tiffany Long
108.
Kristi Harrison and
Mandy Williamson
109.
Kristi Kyle and
Lana Kinney
110.
Kristina Johansson and
Sue Hodgkinson
111.
Kym Hunter and
Laura Sanger
112.
Laura Zeiner and
Susan Kennedy
113.
Laurel Steven and
Mary McGraw
114.
Laurie Hanna and
Lisa Boucher
115.
Lesley Weir and
Liz DeLuca
116.
Linda Djokic and
Tracey Weiser
117.
Linda Inhelder and
Pam Brisse
118.
Linda Landig and
Lori Dorrington
119.
Linda Murphy and
Lisa Hamilton
119.
Line Labrecque and
Marianne Baxter
120.
Lisa Lodge and
Monica Johnson
121.
Lois Moon and
Melissa Muir
122.
Lola Surwillo and
Therese Frank
123.
Lori Bowring Michaud and
Marci Brooks
124.
Lupe Meter and
Norma Agron
125.
Maggie Towne and
Marge Beebe
126.
Malin de Koning and
Susie Hibdon
127.
Mallory Hoffman and
Shirley Moore
128.
Marcie Abney and
Patty Miller
129.
Marcy Lamberson and
Melissa Clarke
130.
Margot Potter and
Suzann Sladcik Wilson
131.
Maria Grimes and
Wendy Blum
132.
Maria Horvath and
Melinda Orr
133.
Maria Rosa Sharrow and
Marie-Noel Voyer-Cramp
134.
Marian Hertzog and
Melissa Mesara
135.
Marianna Boylan and
Sandi Lee James
136.
Marina Dobrynina and
Michaela Pabeschitz
137.
Marsha Neal and
Miri Agassi
138.
Mary Ellen Parker and
Melissa Meman
139.
Mary Elliott and
Tamara Soper
140.
Mary Hicks and
Laurel Steven
141.
Melissa Pynn and
Michelle Buettner
142.
Michelle Hardy and
Niki Meiners
143.
Michelle Mach and
Moira McEvoy
144.
Missy Rappaport and
Mags Saari
145.
Molly Alexander and
Poranna
146.
Mylene Hillam and
Nicole Rennell
147.
Nadezhda Parfyonova and
Stacey Curry
148.
Nan Emmett and
Nancy Peterson
149.
Nancy Boylan and
Natalie McKenna
150.
Natalie Monkivitch and
Niky Sayers
151.
Natasha Lutes and
Pam Ferrari
152.
Noemi Baena and
Penny Ilagan
153.
Pamela Petry and
Rebecca Sirevaag
154.
Pat Haight and
Mary Hicks
155.
Patty Gasparino and
Vonna Maslanka
156.
Penny Neville and
Sandi Volpe
157.
Pepita Bos and
Wendy Chamberlain
158.
Raida Disbrow and
Rebecca Watkins
159.
Rebecca Anderson and
Sabrina Staub
160.
Regina Santerre and
Rose Binoya
161.
Rhea Freitag and
Tari Kahrs
162.
Rochelle Brisson and
Teri Baskett
163.
Sally Russick and
Tracy Bell
164.
Sandra McGriff and
Shay Williams
165.
Sandra Wollberg and
Sara Hardin
166.
Sarah Elder and
Salla Small
167.
Saskia Kaffenberger and
Sharon Gardner
168.
Sharon Palac and
Shannon Chomanczuk
169.
Shay Stone and
Suzette Bentley
170.
Shiraz Biggie and
Tammy Powley
171.
Staci Smith and
Tracy Stillman
172.
Stacie Stamper and
Tracy Martin
173.
Stefanie Teufel and
Vicky Taylor
174.
Stephanie Dixon and
Stephanie LaRosa
175.
Stephanie Haussler and
Valerie Norton
176.
Suzanne Tate and
Terri Wlaschin
177.
Sweet Freedom Designs (ME!) and
Tammy Jones
178.
Tania Spivey and
Tari Sasser
179.
Tara Plote and
Terry Matuszyk
180.
Terri Gauthier and
Deana Hager
181.
Theresa Fosdick and
Tracey Nanstad
While compiling and linking the above list, I visited every shop on the list. I am amazed at the talent, and at how many of these folks I
know from
Etsy and/or
FaceBook! Can't wait to see what everyone makes!