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While I was waiting for charms to dry this weekend, I decided to photograph some of my bracelets from past charms swaps. These beauties contain all original artwork from so many special art friends. They're really too bulky and noisy to wear, and I don't want to break or lose any of the charms, but I have worn some of them before, to art events. I wish I had a good way to display them all the time so I could enjoy looking at them.
I also photographed my high school charm bracelet. It's the mostly silver one above, containing Monet charms from the 1970's. The black and white charm bracelet above is one I made for myself in recent years. The turquoise bracelet was made by the talented
Altered Kat/Great Musings of ZNE and on Etsy. I have purchased several from her for gifts. And the very full white and clear bracelet is by
Miss Vicky, who sells these gorgeous versions in all colors and all themes in her store,
The Funny Pharm.
The charm bracelet with antique brass and the silver one with beach-y charms like the pail and sand dollar are bracelets I have made and sold in my Etsy shop,
Lilly*s of London*ish. The silver one uses fantastic lampwork beads from
Marianna as well as
Coach charms from a deconstructed keyring.
Some of the most full bracelets above are made from charms swaps. The very top one represents charms collected at
Art & Soul, Hampton 2008 and contains 32 different charms from 32 artists. The bracelet with the soldered 'G' Scrabble tile front and center is from a swap at the
ZNE Castle in the Meadow event in Detroit this past summer, and the silver bracelet with the fabric circle charm, soldered Marie Antoinette charm and brass and metal findings charm, among others, is from
Art & Soul Portland, October, 2009. At Portland I was lucky enough to swap with members of the exclusive
Charmsters group, thanks to my 'in' with art buddy
Michelle Geller, who also made several of the charms on this bracelet.
One of the best parts of charm swaps is the presentation of the charms. I have received charms in matchbooks, match boxes, test tubes, mint cans, on
Moo cards and in some many creative and elegant presentations it makes it tempting not to take them apart to attach to a bracelet.
So with charms due for the
Arte du Blythe charm swap and a charm swap sponsored by
Cloth Paper Scissors magazine, as well as wanting to turn in a project for my pitifully-neglected spot on the
Hannah Grey Design Team, I banished myself to the basement to see what I could do.
The "I Dream in French" charms are made by stamping on rolled-out
paper clay with a rubber stamp from
Hannah Grey and a basic ink pad (Staz-On does not work for this project). I cut the charms out with canape cutters and poked a hole with a wood stick. The charms dry light and hard within about 24 hours. I sprayed some with a clear finishing coat and some, I sprayed the backs with silver or gold spray paint and edged them with a silver or gold leaf pen. I added a French brass charm also from
Hannay Grey and jump rings and tied them to watercolor paper artist trading cards. The cards are stamped in French script with a large stamp from
Stampin' Up; the stickers are from
Paula's Kit Club as well as the ribbon.
The "little girl" and "eyeball" charms are a completely different project, obviously. There are eight members of my Arte du Blythe group making and swapping charms, for a bracelet hosted and finished by Miss Vicky. Some of the charms are just outstanding. Check out my
Blythe blog for a sneak peek.