Se conoce con el nombre kumihimo a la antigua técnica de trenzado japonés. Actualmente se utiliza esta técnica para la elaboración de pulseras, collares y colgantes.
I´m Cecilia, free-thinker with boho soul: lover of life and beauty.
I KNOW I'M NO BETTER THAN ANYONE... BUT I'LL BE DAMNED IF THERE IS ANYONE BETTER THAN ME.
Dette anhenget er veldig likt Celtic Circle anhengene jeg har laget tidligere. Endret størrelsen på noen av ringene, og anhenget fikk en femkantet form. Laget av ringer i 1,2mm sølvtråd 925.
Discover our spool of 0.8 mm white nylon elastic thread , the essential accessory for your jewelry and creative hobbies creations . This versatile elastic thread gives you many possibilities for making unique jewelry and innovative creative projects. Here are some possible uses in jewelry and creative hobbies:Elastic bracelets: Use this nylon elastic thread to create trendy elastic bracelets . String on your favorite pearls, gemstones or costume beads and create personalized bracelets that easily fit any wrist size.Necklaces and necklaces: Add a touch of originality to your necklaces and necklaces using this elastic thread. It is perfect for assembling beads, pendants or charms and creating necklaces that are lightweight and comfortable to wear.With our spool of 0.8 mm white nylon elastic thread , you have a quality material to make a multitude of creations in jewelry and creative hobbies. Let your imagination run wild and create unique pieces that reflect your style and creativity.Diameter: 0.8mm Delivered in a 10 meter reel Color differences may occur between product photos and the actual product, depending on your monitor and its calibration. However, the colors are close to what you see in the photos. Thank you to take note https://www. gingerlily.fr Suggestion of presentation, non-contractual photos
Un accesorio que tienes que empezar a usar.
Explore Pilar Cotter’s 6 photos on Flickr!
There are some images from high fashion collections by infamous and rising designers created based on felting technique. Great examples when craft is risen to a designer level. Yohji Yamomoto Fall 2009 Ready to Wear creations which includes felt. Some very subtle, some very exaggerated, but all so ever trés chic. Stella McCartney had included felt in her Fall 2008 collection as an alternative to leather/fur. At NY fashion Week Fall 2010 by Sabah Mansoor Husain, a MFA Fashion and Knitwear Design student whose knitwear collection combines an eclectic set of techniques derived from both craft and design. She drew from traditional methods of felting fabrics, crochet, hand embroidery and Shibori (a Japanese technique of dyeing a pattern by binding, stitching, folding, twisting or compressing fabric). Sabah also added jewel details to her entirely black and charcoal collection. Inspired by chandeliers, she worked with an artisan in Firozabad, India developing the jewel-shaped crystals.
Kumihimo flat fletting med 8 tråder, randfarge - lag et armbånd Kumihimo tutorial - half flat braid with 8 threads - make a bracelet wit...
El simbolismo es el eje de las diferentes colecciones de Ananda Khalsa. La joyería de esta artista tiene una clara inspiración asiática. Las delicadas pinturas en papel y de estilo oriental se convierten en el centro de unas piezas donde el metal aparece sutilmente. The symbolism is central to the collections of Ananda Khalsa. The jewelry of this artist has a clearly Asian inspiration. The delicate paintings on paper and oriental style are the center of this type of jewelry where the metal appear subtly. Más info / More info: http://www.anandakhalsa.com/
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Donc, en gardant à l’esprit l’expression « bureau bien rangé, esprit ordonné », et grâce aux différents rangements que je vais vous présenter, j’ai décidé de faire un ménage de printemps dans mon atelier !
Recycled Sari Silk Wrapped Bangle Stack with mixes of left over beads! The 3 above were inspired in 2010 by eclectic gipsyland's flickr photo set called Roulottes; Someday I will have my own gypsy wagon and the only man allowed in will be the one who loads the heavy stuff for me. but I digress... I loved Linda's vision for Adorn Me! and wanted to be involved. At that time (2009) bezels and nickel silver were all the rage in artisan jewelry and I researched carefully to create a completely unique full days workshop that was exciting, colorful and textural. Once I had the neck cuff down, the bangles were a cinch to create and the wrapped ear hoops came easily after. I submitted my workshop with my copyrighted pictures and a full stepped out instructional hand out for all the students. It took approximately 4 weeks to research that this design was NOT being offered anywhere else, that my information was accurate and that all the teacher requirements were met. The workshop was rejected because of my lack of teaching references. Ah well, it was still a good learning experience and here I was with a full collection of never been seen jewelry! So I just started listing the pieces in my etsy shop and sending them in to stores. I was delighted to find buyers felt the same as I did about them! I had hoped to try again as a workshop instructor somewhere with this idea but it looked as if someone else needed the fresh idea more. It isn't the first time it happened, it isn't the last and I have a well of creative ideas to draw from so I can easily walk away from any design that I conceived that is in danger of becoming mainstream to embrace something new...... like patina-ted metal. Again, researching carefully that no one else was offering such a concept. And there wasn't! Even the forums at Ganoskin had an bare patina section! Since then, Tim McCreight released a video on patinas and I was not worried because even though life had gotten in the way of my plans (2 rejected book proposals and my need to become the main provider for my family due to Mike coming out of remission and the subsequent 2nd diagnoses of PNH), my idea was still different enough to have merit, easy to learn, and had really fun results! I knew that if I couldn't put it down that there were bound to be others who couldn't either. I am thrilled that my work resonates with so many people and that many jewelry artists have gone further in their personal jewelry journey from inspiration that I have given them. http://missficklemediacom.blogspot.com/2009/07/sneak-peek.html I am going to keep thinking outside of the box. I am going to keep looking for ways to make unique jewelry that appeals to those dissatisfied with what is being offered mainstream. I am going to keep discovering ways to make money, creating. And I am going to keep sharing how to do it all with you. Just wait until you see what I have in development, and then just wait until you see it in someone else's book, blog or shop showing how to make it! I'll be taking money on bets that it will be within 6 months of my release. With Much Love, Respect, and Complete Understanding of How the World Works, Shannon
Dicen que lo bueno viene en empaques pequeños, y es una frase que podría aplicar para todo. En los últimos años se ha visto una tendencia muy marcada hacia el estilo minimalista en la arquitectura y el diseño. En el caso de los anillos de compromiso, se ha vuelto muy popular como una alternativa a l
Blog con tutoriales de Gimp, joomla , photooshop y manulaidades de pirograbado y labores.
I create two distinct lines of jewelry in my shop. My tagua nut line is all about combining playful colors with simple shapes and designs, where as my gemstone jewelry is delicate and intricate. They are both inspired by my love of geometry, pattern, and sculpture.
I have come across Katharina Vones’ jewellery when researching for inspiration for my current project Body Extensions. While she produces large, unconventional body adornment pieces that are …
Books come in all different shapes, sizes and are full of wonderful and exciting stories, as are their readers. As a book-lover myself, I like to find new ways to show off my love for books as often as possible, and that sometimes comes through…
proud khampa dude at tibet's litang horse festival 2007 with an impressive mass of family ornaments - worn only on special occasions, and for the special fashion parade probably borrowed from a range of relatives ====================================================== Ornaments make up most of the life savings of many Khampa families, and so play an important role in Tibetan families' lives as well as in announcing the social status of the wearers. They are saved up for over many years and handed down for centuries from generation to generation within families. Until very recently, these families were nomadic and have to move every few months because of the snowy seasons in the Himalayas, so Khampas have always needed to store their wealth in portable form. So being unable to store wealth in the form of estates or houses or land or in a bank, for millenia wealth has been stored in art, precious fabrics, and particularly into ornaments. Their culture is very conservative about the type of ornaments favored: for thousands of years jewelry made from amber, turquoise and coral have been worn because the stones are believed to hold spiritual power. Gold and silver and also naturally found in Tibet, and the use of these metals by the wealthy also goes back thousands of years. Their ornaments are very chunky, bold and colorful. While the gold earrings that Khampa women wear may have cost them a year or maybe several year's of their salary, ornaments carry so much social status in their society that probably didn't have to think twice about the purchase. To the Khampa people these ornaments have the utmost sentimental value and significance, because they are the physical remnants of generations of their ancestors hard work or success. what these people are wearing is not just their life savings, but also their family history and treasure. this culture has been around for millenia - archeological finds from the 1st century AD in the khampa area unearthed ornaments that are essentially the same in design and materials as today's are. there are also beliefs that the stones provide good luck and protection to disease. dyed red coral is the most sought after stone, but interestingly tibet is very very far from any oceans - all the coral is imported by traders! Religious symbols from Tibetan Buddhism frequency form the designs of pieces, however archeological finds show that the role of ornaments in Tibetan society and peoples' lives long predate the arrival of Buddhism in Tibet. Indeed the beliefs of spiritual protection being provided by coral, amber and turquoise probably originate from the ancient shamanic Bon religion.
Crow's Nest Trading Co. was your one stop source for western clothing, jewelry and furniture. Sadly they are out of business, but there are other options.
Jewelry designer Akiko Shinzato is pushing jewelry and beauty conventions with her face-embellishing creations.
Le bocfil, autrement appelé "porte-scies", est un outil indispensable pour le bijoutier. Découvrez dans cet article cet outil aux multiples usages.