Blog Carnival: Artistic Path to Jewelry
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As a kid, my hobby was “making things,” I had a huge table in my room, a shelf full of supplies, and I’d just make things.
My mom did a small amount of beading, and I remember her coming back from a bead store once with all kinds of exciting things — glass beads, bead caps.
In junior high and high school I “made” jewelry using fishing swivels and by modifying existing jewelry, using simple tools — just tweezers and epoxy. I’m not even sure if I had pliers.
I may still have a couple of those “early works” around here somewhere; like a lot of jewelers, I can be a bit of a pack rat.
It turns out the second high school I went to had metalsmithing classes! I didn’t know, but then again, I didn’t have room in my schedule anyway.
On a high school trip to Spain, we visited a jewelry workshop where the bench guys were doing a cool gold and silver inlay technique. I was fascinated and I remember the guy kind of glaring at me, like, “Go away kid, you bother me.” We also saw lots of cool swords on that trip — in general my interest in metal was piqued.
Then in college, at U of Iowa, where I spent one semester, I got the last space in the metalsmithing class.
I was bitten by the metals bug! Spent tons of free time in the studio. My final project that semester was a gold ring I made — a simple band made from stock, sized and soldered, with gold wires on top, soldered. It was nice.
I also made a ton of boxes. I have a couple of those still. My slides of them are actual slides, but I’ll shoot some new pictures and post them soon.
After leaving U of Iowa (it smelled like a pig farm), I went to the U of Illinois at Chicago, where, sadly, there is no metals program. So I commuted to Columbia College to take a metals class and took GIA and trade school classes in the summers.
So why jewelry? Why not something else?
I like the problem solving bit. I like the extra challenge of it having to work. And I’ve also always like jewelry. And it turns out I like metal. I even like the smell of metal. I like that metalsmithing is hard, but I’ve learned to do it.
I like the continuing challenge — that there’s always more to learn, that I’ll never run out of challenges.
Want more stories of the artistic path to jewelry? Here are more carnival members:
Lora Hart
Angela B. Crispin
Marco Fleseri
and joining us for the first time this month:














Ooops, how’d I miss this one? Gonna go throw something together and get it up.
Elaine
enjoyed hearing about your travels in your path to jewelry enlightenment, but need to comment that as an alum, the U of I does not smell like a pig farm (usually that is a comment about ISU in Ames, the ag school). :o)
Cindy