At the
end of last year Etsy shop owner Vente from Lithuania asked me if I would like
to use some of the products from her shop..Nosnowsupplies and see what I could
create with them.
Soon a
packet arrived...
I was fascinated
to read why and how Vente set up her shop.
This is
what she told me
I’m a journalist by profession. I opened my shop a few years ago. I`ve always enjoyed arts and crafts, and was always making something with hands, especially during winters, which are very cold here, sometimes so cold, that people don`t leave their houses for several days (so you can see why I named my shop "no snow supplies" :-). I inherited a big box of buttons from my grandmother, who was a tailor, and then started to collect vintage beads and buttons from various sources to mainly use for myself, until I realized I really have too many and it was time to open a shop. I love vintage beads because of their bright colours and funny shapes. I think that contemporary beads are not made this creatively. I mainly sell beads from the Soviet Union, West Germany, Austria, Italy, France, Czechoslovakia and Japan. They date 1950-1970`s. I also have some modern beads, but not much. These soft flexible plastic beads are from West Germany, a small town, called Kaufbeuren, which had a big bead factory and a jewelry school (both closed already). There was a huge fashion to wear jewelry and accessories made from these beads in 1950`s and you can still find some in the flea markets in Europe (they were exporting them all over Europe and also to US). They`re fun to play with and can be stacked in different designs. These beads are very hard to find and my stock is limited.
Dark blue and pale yellow flowers, I added silver wire centers and dark blue rings and completed the earring with silver studs |
Orange feather shapes with paler glass flowers |
Dainty lilac daisy with three tiny plastic flowers bunched together in the center. I added tiny glass seeds and silver ear wires |
This shape was really challenging , I layered it with a paler yellow flower, a white bead center and a tiny yellow seed bead to finish. ... I was pleased with the results. |
Interesting post Sarah. Love the earrings you made best of all.
ReplyDeleteThis reminds me of the seaglass swap I did with a US shop Seaglass lass:
http://handmadebyamor.blogspot.ie/2012/12/crafty-exchange-of-seaglass.html. It's great fun when networking like that provides the opportunity to try out new materials or methods, isn't it?
Very interested to see what you had done with your swap.Perhaps this is something we should do more often. It certainly made me look 'outside the box' for ideas.
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