Showing posts with label Art and Craft. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art and Craft. Show all posts

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Venetian Glass Beads - A Small Wonder


Venetian glass beads are wonderful - they have long been the height of elegance and beauty in glass beads. They are produced in Murano, Italy. Back in 1291, the ruling Doges were afraid of the potential for a fire in Venice, so they banned the fire kilns and furnaces used to make glass beads from Venice. The manufacturers moved to Murano but couldn't go anywhere else for centuries because the Doges wanted to keep their monopoly over the glassmaking. This strict monopoly lasted for centuries. However, in the late 1600s, rival glassworks were set up in other countries, in such centres as London, Amsterdam and Bohemia.

You are probably familiar with millefiori glass cane mosaic beads. Their name refers to it seeming as if each bead is decorated with a thousand small flowers. An old technique once used by Phonecians and Romans, the artisans in Murano redeveloped it for their glassworks and we still have it to this day!

Photo courtesy of Iris Dragon's Flickr photostream.

Using Natural Materials for Beading



A lot of people are enjoying bead craft in one form or another. Beads can be expensive to buy if we need a lot to sustain a hobby; or, they may be made of materials such as plastics which are not so great for the environment. The solution can be to make more use of natural materials for beading projects. Here are some suggestions.



Steps

  1. Make your own clay beads. You can make beads really easily using clay. Shapes are really endless - circles, ovals, tubes, squares, diamonds and more. They can be used naturally once dried, or you can paint and/or glaze them.
  2. Consider animal by-products. This won't be for everyone but it is a time-honoured tradition to use up all of an animal, including horns, hooves, hair, teeth and bone to make ornaments. Plus, you don't have to kill an animal to get some animal derived bead material. Consider horsehair rolled into a bead - if you own a horse, you'll easy find tail and mane hair stuck to fences, posts and stable areas etc. The seaside is crammed with shells, fish cartilages and bones and other washed up debris of animal origin. Antlers, horns and other items are often shed and found on the forest floor. All of these items can be turned into excellent beads.
  3. Think plants. Seed pods can make wonderful beads, as well as other tree and plant seeds, nuts, gnarled wood knots and other hard plant pieces with interesting shapes. Pieces of fossilized plants can make excellent beads too; if you're lucky enough to find them and they aren't classified as protected.
  4. Try minor gems. Those little treasure chests of tiny gems sold in museum and science discovery shops are not just for cluttering up the mantelpiece - these make great bead objects for beading.
  5. Keep an eye out when walking in nature. You can be inspired by anything natural to make wonderful beadwork. Let your imagination help you choose.
Materials
  • Natural beads
  • Project patterns or plans
Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.