Warren Feld Jewelry

Taking Jewelry Making Beyond Craft

Archive for the ‘beadwork’ Category

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Q5 When Is Enough Enough?

Posted by learntobead on May 8, 2025

QUESTION #5: When is enough enough? How does the jewelry artist know when the piece is done? Overdone? Or underdone? What is the evidence? How do you edit? What fix-it strategies do you come up with and employ?

In the bead and jewelry arenas, you see piece after piece that is either over-embellished or under-done. Things may get too repetitive with the elements and materials. Or the pieces don’t feel that they are quite there yet.

For every piece of jewelry there will be that point of parsimony when enough is enough. We want to find that point where experiencing the “whole” is more satisfying than experiencing any of the parts. That point of parsimony is where, if we added (or subtracted) one more thing, we would detract from the whole of our design.

Knowing that point of parsimony is also related to anticipating how and when others will judge the piece as finished and successful. And what to do about it when judged unfinished or unsuccessful.

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Read more articles about FLUENCY IN DESIGN on the JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB.

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Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Can I Make Money?

Posted by learntobead on May 3, 2025

Some jewelry designers are only interested in selling the occasional piece. Others want to create a steady flow of some extra income. Still others want to be financially self-sufficient as a jewelry designer.

Whatever your personal goal and commitment, can you make money? The answer is YES!That is, if you are smart about it.

Your friends and relatives might tell you that jewelry design “Is not practical,” or a warning “Don’t quit your day job.”

I won’t lie to you. It’s tough. It requires commitment and perseverance. It requires some introverted skills and some extroverted skills. It requires managing a process which includes some creative elements and some business and administrative ones. But you can do it.

First, goals. …

… Continue Reading on the JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Leave a Comment »

The Jewelers’ Palette, 5/1/2025

Posted by learntobead on April 27, 2025

From Warren and
Land of Odds
Join my community of jewelry designers on my Patreon hub
MAY 1, 2025
Sign up for a Free or Paid Subscription[Note: Paid Subscribers on Patreon Hub get 25% Off @Land of Odds]www.landofodds.comHi everyone,
Some Updates and Things Happening.
(Please share this newsletter)

Some Updates and Things Happening.
(Please share this newsletter)

In this Issue:
1. Jewels of the Garden
2. HANDWORK: Celebrating American Craft 2026
3. Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way, 2nd Edition Released
4. 64 Open Courses You Can Apply For
5. Your Artist Statement
6. Call for Entries: Workhouse Arts Center CLAY INTERNATIONAL
7. The Jewelry of Lesley Aine McKeown

Some articles you may have missed
Featured
  1. Jewels of the Garden
Read the full article in Ornament Magazine



Insects and fruits in adornment.   What would jewelry be without them?




  2.  HANDWORK: Celebrating American Craft 2026



To join the celebration, please contact Jen Ruppmann (handwork@craftamerica.org) .
Visit www.handwork2026.org for a full listing of participating organizations.
  3.  Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way, 2nd Edition Released

 184pp, many images and diagrams EbookKindle or PrintClassic Elegance! Timeless! Architectural Perfection!
Learn a simple Pearl Knotting technique anyone can do. 
No special tools. Beautiful. Durable. Wearable.
In this very detailed book, with thorough instructions and pictures, you are taught a non-traditional Pearl Knotting technique which is very easy for anyone to learn and do. Does not use special tools. Presents a simple way to tie knots and position the knots to securely abut the bead. Anticipates both appeal and functionality. Shows clearly how to attach your clasp and finish off your cords.Most traditional techniques are very frustrating. These can get overly complicated and awkward. They rely on tools for making and positioning the knots. When attempting to follow traditional techniques, people often find they cannot tie the knots, make good knots, get the knots close enough to the beads, nor centered between them. How to attach the piece to the clasp gets simplified or glossed over.Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way teaches you how to:· Hand-knot without tools· Select stringing materials· Begin and finish pieces by (1) attaching directly to the clasp, (2) using French wire bullion, (3), using clam shell bead tips, or, (4) making a continuous piece without a clasp· Add cord· Buy pearls, care for them, string and restring them, store themPearl Knotting doesn’t need to be this hard. By the end of Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way, you will have mastered hand-knotting pearls. RE: Second EditionThis second edition takes into account a fuller utilization of technical options for the E-book version. Additional information, clarifications and summaries of ideas are added throughout. Instructions for Variation #3: Using Clam Shell Bead Tips is simplified a little bit.184pp, many images and diagrams EbookKindle or Print

  4. 64 Open Courses You Can Apply ForWhen jewelry making is your passion…

Read the list here.


  5.  Your Artist Statement
📝 Your Artist Statement isn’t about you—it’s about the work.

Curators are looking for clarity, context, and commitment.

A strong artist statement clearly explains what your work is about, what drives it, and why it matters—without over-intellectualizing.

Avoid vague phrases like “exploring the liminal space…” unless you can explain exactly what that means.

Your bio, on the other hand, is your professional snapshot. Lead with location, education, exhibitions, and press—keep it factual and recent.


  6.   Call for entries, Workhouse Arts Center CLAY INTERNATIONAL


 READ THE PROSPECTUS HERE
  7.  The Jewelry of Lesley Aine McKeownVisit her website
“Creating is a process constantly in motion, one that keeps the maker searching for balance. I hope to create work that provokes thought. Bordering between sculpture and jewelry each is thoughtful in design and construction representing a meaning deeper than aesthetics.”“I am fascinated with juxtaposition and fluidity of materials. My work is about exploring the aspects of ephemeral impressions and the urbanity of metal. I use precious metals, stones and alternative materials to explore these expressions.”Using low-tech traditional metal smithing techniques and tools, each piece is created in Lesley’s studio in the tradition of the American Studio Art Jewelry movement of the 1940’s through the 60’s, which dictates that the work is created entirely in the artist’s studio. Her work is hand fabricated using recycled metals and ethically, sustainably-mined gemstones.



Visit her website      UPCOMING WORKSHOPS by Warren FeldSat, 6/7, 1-4, WIRE WRAPPED CABOCHON PENDANT, Hoamsy, Nashville, Nashville, Fait La Force Brewery,1414 3rd Ave S, Ste 101, Nashville
Register :https://www.hoamsy.com/experiences/detail/6azTthSZL5h76jCqKjNp

9/15/2025 – 10/15/2025   Art Jewelry Exhibit at Pryor Gallery, Columbia State Community College
My pieces will be showcased an this exhibit.   In the works is a possible Seminar and a beading workshop.SOME POSTS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED:CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE SERIES:
At The Beginning
Threading The Business Neede
Strategic Management
Let Business Concerns Influence Your Artistic Choices
Your First Jewelry Sale

 Feature your jewelryHere next weekIn This Newsletter,
as well as,
on our Jewelry Designer’s Hub!


Email a post (text and/or image) to warren@warrenfeldjewelry.com.

Promote your current projects, promotional copy, News & Views, videos, reels, tutorials, instructions, social media posts online in this newsletter and on our jewelry designers’ Patreon hub.

No deadlines!   Opportunity available all the time.    No fees.   

But don’t wait to take advantage of this opportunity.

  This copyrighted material is published here with permission of the author(s) as noted, or with Land of Odds or Warren Feld Jewelry.    All rights reserved.Repairs Stumping You?
Let Me Take A Look

I take in a lot of jewelry repairs.    People either bring them to me in Columbia, TN, or, I pick them up and deliver them back in Nashville.   I am in Nashville at least once a week.    It’s been convenient for most people to meet me at Green Hills Mall.    But if not, I can come to your workplace or your home.   This is perfectly fine for me.   My turnaround time typically is 3-4 weeks.

I do most repairs, but I do not do any soldering.    I also do not repair watches.    These are the kinds of repairs I do:

o Beaded jewelry
o Pearl knotting, hand knotting
o Size/Length adjustment
o Re-stringing
o Wire work/weave/wrap
o Micro macrame
o Broken clasp replacfement
o Earring repair
o Replace lost rhinestones or gemstones
o Stone setting
o Stretchy bracelet
o Metal working which does not involve soldering
o Bead woven jewelry and purses
o Beaded clothing
o Custom jewelry design


View my How-To-Repair-Jewelry videos on our Jewelry Designers’ Hub.
My most recent how-to:   Converting 3-Strand Stretchy Bracelet to Cable Wire W/ Clasp

WARREN FELD JEWELRY (www.warrenfeldjewelry.com)
Custom Design, Workshops, Video Tutorials, Webinars, Coaching, Kits, Group Activities, Repairs
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Join our community of jewelry designers
on my
 Patreon hub

Be part of a community of jewelry designers who recognize that we have a different way of thinking and doing than other types of crafters or artists.
One free downloadable Mini-Lesson of your choice for all new members!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Follow me on social media:  facebookinstagramshop.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Where you can buy:
Seed Beads and Delicas, Kits, Books, Finished Jewelry

school.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Take advantage of our video tutorials, mini-lessons, projects and our coaching services:

Read articles about jewelry design and about the business of craft:
Articles on Medium.com 

Books (in kindle, ebook or print formats) by Warren Feld, purchase from Amazon.com or BarnesAndNoble.com:

Kits by Warren Feld

Ask about my COACHING services

Arrange a GROUP ACTIVITY

Add your email address to my Warren Feld Jewelry emailing list here.


 Thanks for being here.   I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.Join A Community Of Jewelry Designers 
On MyPatreon Hub

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Approaching Stores and Galleries

Posted by learntobead on April 25, 2025

Approaching Stores and Galleries

Although some jewelry designers may feel uneasy mixing art with business, for most it is a necessity. Yet, you do not have to sacrifice wonder for reality. Most designers sell their pieces, so recognizing the things about coordinating art with business becomes very important.

When approaching stores or galleries to display and sell your pieces, it is critical that the designer understand how these venues function, who their audiences are, and what the attendant risks to them are, should they decide to exhibit and/or sell your pieces.

The first step is to be your authentic, passionate self. Your jewelry will not speak for itself. So, in spite of any feelings of vulnerability you might have when approaching stores and galleries, you will need to talk about yourself and your jewelry. You do not want to feel “salesy” when speaking with business or gallery owners and representatives. You do not want to feel pushy. Or desperate. But you do want them to get to Yes.

Continue reading on the JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Leave a Comment »

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Q3 How Do You Chose Materials and Techniques?

Posted by learntobead on April 22, 2025

QUESTION 3: What kinds of MATERIALS work well together, and which ones do not? This applies to TECHNIQUES as well. What kinds of TECHNIQUES (or combinations of techniques) work well when, and which ones do not?

A successful jewelry design has a character of its own as well as some kind of evocative essence. Let’s call this a tone. The choice of materials, including beads, clasps, and stringing materials, and the choice of techniques, including stringing, weaving, wire working, glassworks, metalworks, clayworks, cements that tone into place. Techniques link the designer’s intent with the client’s expectations. The successful designer has a depth of knowledge about materials, their attributes, their strengths, their weaknesses, and is able to leverage the good and minimize the bad within any design. The same can be said of techniques.

The choice of materials and the choice of techniques set the tone and chances of success for your piece. Materials and techniques establish the character and personality of your designs. They contribute to understandings whether the piece is finished and successful.

However, there are no perfect materials (or techniques) for every jewelry project. Selecting materials (or techniques) is about making smart, strategic choices. This means relating your choices to your design and marketing goals. It also frequently means having to make tradeoffs and judgment calls between aesthetics and functionality. Last, materials (or techniques) may have different relationships with the designer, wearer or viewer depending on how they are intended to be used, and the situational or cultural contexts….

…CONTINUE READING THIS ARTICLE ON MY JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Thanks for being here. I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: A Multi-Venue Approach

Posted by learntobead on April 18, 2025

A Multi-Venue Approach
Towards The Creative Marketplace

Successful jewelry designers are able to get the visibility and legitimacy they want and deserve. They know what to expect when exposing their work publicly within the creative marketplace.

They are good at communicating their ideas and their value, when approaching art and craft show vendors, stores and boutiques, galleries, and buyers and collectors, or applying for art grants or doing demonstrations. They are able to get articles written about them in blogs, newspapers, magazines and jewelry editorials. And, very importantly, they use a multi-venue approach (diversification) when introducing their jewelry into the marketplace. At a minimum, this multi-venue approach will include both an on-line strategy and a bricks-and-mortar strategy.

CONTINUE READING ON MY JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

Conquering The Creative Marketplace

Many people learn beadwork and jewelry-making in order to sell the pieces they make. Based both on the creation and development of my own jewelry design business, as well as teaching countless students over the past 35+ years about business and craft, I want to address what should be some of your key concerns and uncertainties. I want to share with you the kinds of things (specifically, a business mindset and confidence) it takes to start your own jewelry business, run it, anticipate risks and rewards, and lead it to a level of success you feel is right for you. I want to help you plan your road map.

I will explore answers to such questions as: How does someone get started marketing and selling their pieces? What business fundamentals need to be brought to the fore? How do you measure risk and return on investment? How does the creative person develop and maintain a passion for business? To what extent should business decisions affect artistic choices? What similar traits to successful jewelry designers do those in business share? How do you protect your intellectual property?

The major topics covered include,

1. Integrating Business With Design

2. Getting Started

3. Financial Management

4. Product Development, Creating Your Line, and Pricing

5. Marketing, Promotion, Branding

6. Selling

7. Professional Responsibilities and Strategic Planning

8. Professional Responsibilities and Gallery / Boutique Representation

9. Professional Responsibilities and Creating Your Necessary Written Documents

548pp, many images and diagrams
Kindle or Ebook or Print

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Q2 How Do You Decide What To Create?

Posted by learntobead on April 14, 2025

QUESTION 2: How do you decide what you want to create? What kinds of things do you do to translate your passions and inspirations into jewelry? What is your creative process?

Applying yourself creatively can be fun at times, but scary at other times. It is work. You are creating something out of nothing. There is an element of risk. You might not like what you end up doing. Your friends might not like it. Nor your family. You might not finish it. Or you might do it wrong. It may seem easier to go with someone else’s project.

Applying creativity means developing abilities to generate options and alternatives, and narrowing these down to specific choices. It means developing an ease and comfort generating fix-it strategies when approaching unknown situations or problematic ones. It means figuring out how to translate inspiration into design in a way that inspires others and taps into their desires. It means differentiating yourself from other jewelry designers as a measure of your originality.

Creative people…

CONTINUE READING ON MY JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB…

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Leave a Comment »

Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way, 2nd Edition Released

Posted by learntobead on April 13, 2025

Easy. Simple. No Tools. Anyone Can Do!

184pp, many images and diagrams Ebook, Kindle or Print

Classic Elegance! Timeless! Architectural Perfection!
Learn a simple Pearl Knotting technique anyone can do. 
No special tools. Beautiful. Durable. Wearable.

In this very detailed book, with thorough instructions and pictures, you are taught a non-traditional Pearl Knotting technique which is very easy for anyone to learn and do. Does not use special tools. Presents a simple way to tie knots and position the knots to securely abut the bead. Anticipates both appeal and functionality. Shows clearly how to attach your clasp and finish off your cords.

Most traditional techniques are very frustrating. These can get overly complicated and awkward. They rely on tools for making and positioning the knots. When attempting to follow traditional techniques, people often find they cannot tie the knots, make good knots, get the knots close enough to the beads, nor centered between them. How to attach the piece to the clasp gets simplified or glossed over.

Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way teaches you how to:

· Hand-knot without tools

· Select stringing materials

· Begin and finish pieces by (1) attaching directly to the clasp, (2) using French wire bullion, (3), using clam shell bead tips, or, (4) making a continuous piece without a clasp

· Add cord

· Buy pearls, care for them, string and restring them, store them

Pearl Knotting doesn’t need to be this hard. By the end of Pearl Knotting…Warren’s Way, you will have mastered hand-knotting pearls.

RE: Second Edition

This second edition takes into account a fuller utilization of technical options for the E-book version. Additional information, clarifications and summaries of ideas are added throughout. Instructions for Variation #3: Using Clam Shell Bead Tips is simplified a little bit.

184pp, many images and diagrams Ebook, Kindle or Print

https://shop.ingramspark.com/b/084?params=uJnUNg0Bw09Wrf6V1B5dcnrRbCRSTkic8maIUhMA49i

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Leave a Comment »

THE JEWELERS’ PALLETTE, 4/25/2025

Posted by learntobead on April 11, 2025


From Warren and Land of Odds
Join my community of jewelry designers on my Patreon hub
April 15, 2025
Sign up for a Free or Paid Subscription

[Note: Paid Subscribers on Patreon Hub get 25% Off @Land of Odds]

www.landofodds.com

Hi everyone,

Some Updates and Things Happening.
(Please share this newsletter)

In this Issue:
1. How to use AI in your jewelry business
2. Some pointers about the design of your website
3. Take Some Time To Celebrate Yourself!
4. Jewelry in the news
5. Simplify your INSTAGRAM feed — some tips
6. FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Fluency and Empowerment
 
Some articles you may have missed
Featured


1. How to use AI in your jewelry business

Suggestions from Megan Crabtree
Read her full article in INSTORE MAGAZINE here.

Here are nine AI-driven strategies to boost your bottom line.

1. Personalized recommendations. AI analyzes customer behavior, such as purchase history, browsing behavior, and interactions with the brand. It then suggests relevant products, such as a “complete your look” feature at checkout, which increases sales and engagement.

2. Virtual try-ons. Augmented reality, powered by AI, is transforming the jewelry shopping experience. Virtual try-ons allow customers to see how a piece of jewelry would look on them without ever visiting the store, offering more confidence in their purchasing decisions.

3. Inventory management. Predictive analytics can take the guesswork out of inventory management by forecasting demand. This ensures you neither overstock nor run out of high-demand items, which leads to better resource allocation and cost savings.

4. Customer service chatbots. AI chatbots provide instant 24/7 support, freeing staff for in-store interactions. It’s important, however, to have a process in place for a smooth handoff to a human representative to resolve more complex issues.

5. Visual search. Customers can upload an image to find similar jewelry in your inventory, making discovery seamless.

6. Dynamic pricing optimization. AI can optimize your pricing strategy by suggesting pricing adjustments, in real-time, based on competitor rates, demand, and sales trends to maximize profits.

7. Product photography enhancement. AI-powered tools can automatically enhance product images, ensuring consistency and high quality across all visuals. Additionally, 360-degree views of jewelry pieces can be created, allowing customers to examine items from every angle.

8. Appraisal assistance. AI streamlines jewelry appraisals with data-driven valuations, reducing errors and increasing accuracy.

9. PRODUCT DESCRIPTIONS. AI can significantly improve the quality of your product descriptions by translating industry jargon into customer-friendly language. Many shoppers are unfamiliar with terms like “14KWG” and would prefer a description that simply says, “14 karat white gold.” Clear, well-crafted descriptions make it easier for shoppers to purchase with confidence

So how can you get started? Identify your business needs (e.g., design, marketing, customer service, logistics) and explore AI tools already integrated into your existing e-commerce, CRM, or design software. Many platforms offer free trials or demos.


2. Some pointers about the design of your website

With the availability of chatgpt and other ai applications, it has become ever more difficult to do a Search Engine Optimization (SEO) on your website and compete. Every new or upgraded website will have done this making it as difficult as ever to depend on someone doing a search engine search and finding you. 

This means that the look and feel of your website will become its biggest asset.

Some things to think about:

  • Use your website as a portfolio, rather than a sales tool.
  • Keep your website clean and focused on your credibility.
  • Don’t worry about accommodating Google’s ranking and rating search criteria
  • Rely more on social media, like Instagram, and on email to drive traffic to your site
  • Large, high resolution impactful photos on your landing page is ideal
  • Use larger fonts, black type on white background works best
  • If listing collections on your landing page, also include a short description with each one
  • BE SURE: It’s easy to find how to contact you

3. Take Some Time To Celebrate Yourself

When was the last time this year you paused and looked back to celebrate the little wins — or the big ones?

It’s so easy to get caught up on doing, doing, doing… without pause.

At least once a week, sit down in a familiar place, relax, and reflect. 

And celebrate yourself!


4. Jewelry In the News

o MUNICH JEWELLERY WEEK TO RELOCATE TO ALASKA IN 2026
In an effort to fight global warming, the biggest global event in art jewelry will be permanently held in Anchorage. There’s a positive side to it: “Big, heavy parkas are a great surface for displaying brooches,” stated Frau Brosche, a press officer from the Internationale Handwerksmesse.

Bespoke abacus yellow gold ring with yellow sapphire, designed and made by Tamara Gomez, photo courtesy of the artist

o SMITHSONIAN TO OPEN MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN ART JEWELER
The institution will join the Air and Space and Hirshhorn museums on the National Mall in Washington, DC. Yvonne Montoya, AJF’s former executive director, has been appointed its director. “Pforzheim and Espace Solidor won’t get all the glory,” vows Montoya.

Called Scrambled Head with Glimmer of Hope, this Tamara Gomez statement ring is made with diamond, moissanite, 14-karat yellow gold, and sterling silver, photo courtesy of the artist

o NEW EXHIBITION — FOLLOW YOUR NOSE: SEPTUM RINGS OF THE POWERFUL
“With this type of piercing,” said curator Naz Schnozz, “you can wear a retainer that flips up inside the nostrils. That means the public doesn’t know you have a septum ring.” Many are familiar with Madeleine Albright as a diplomat who spoke with her brooches, “but few realize she wore a septum ring in private,” added Schnozz. Besides Albright’s jewelry, the traveling exhibit features pieces worn by Angela Merkel, Emmanuel Macron, and Michelle Obama. Coming soon to a museum near you!

The 18-karat gold Cherrybomb ring with sapphires, diamonds, and tourmalines, designed and crafted by Aishleen Lester, photo courtesy of the artist

o KIM KARDASHIAN APPLIES TO JEWELRY MASTERS PROGRAMS
She’s already done shapewear, fragrance, makeup, investing. In 2011 Kardashian launched a line of costume jewelry that let fans accessorize like her at an affordable price, but it flopped. The reality star attributed this to the baubles being kind of “basic.” Enrolling in a master’s jewelry program “will hone my understanding of jewelry theory,” says the influencer, “and help me create designs that are more critical of the beauty industry. That’s what my fans really want.” Kardashian hopes to start classes this fall and looks forward to dialog with instructors and fellow students.

Hugo Luis Johnson’s white gold and silver violin won Silver at the 2021 Goldsmiths’ Craft and Design Council Awards, photo courtesy of the artist

o ADRIAN BRODY DESIGNS LINE OF CONCRETE ART JEWELRY
“My stylist has had me wearing brooches on the red carpet,” says the actor, “Her choices are pretty conventional high pieces, but they gave me an interest in jewelry as a medium. Then filming The Brutalist made me want to design my own. I asked a local contractor to show me how to make little molds and mix the cement.” Find the pieces in the MOMA gift shop.


5. Simplify your INSTAGRAM feed — some tips

📱 Simplify your Instagram feed to attract more followers.

  • Avoid adding text directly on images. Keep your jewelry as the main visual and use captions or separate slides for text.
  • If you need to include text or promotional material, make it the last slide rather than the cover image.
  • Promotional content, like event details or newsletter sign-ups, works better in Instagram Stories instead of your feed.

A clean, cohesive feed makes your art look more appealing and increases the likelihood of organic followers staying and engaging with your work.

 📈 Boost Instagram engagement by showcasing your process.

While personal moments add depth, prioritize close-up shots of your jewelry making process, selecting materials, implementing techniques, choosing colors and other design elements. These are visually engaging & highlight skill.

Instead of vague captions, explain why your jewelry is unique. Share insights about your techniques, inspirations, and creative decisions to draw in your audience.

Start reels with attention-grabbing text like “This transformed my jewelry making” or “Here’s how I create rythm” to keep viewers watching.

Experiment with a series of reels following the same engaging format, such as “How I make jewelry [subject],” to create familiarity and encourage followers to return.

NOTE: Instagram’s algorithm now prioritizes content discovery through the Explore page and recommendations rather than hashtags.


6. FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Fluency and Empowerment

The fluent jewelry designer is able to think like a designer. The jewelry designer is more than a craftsperson and more than an artist. The jewelry designer must learn a specialized language, and specialized way of balancing the needs for appeal with the needs for functionality. The jewelry designer must intimately recognize and understand the roles jewelry plays for individuals as well as the society as a whole. The designer must learn how art, architecture, physical mechanics, engineering, sociology, psychology, context, even party planning, all must come together and get expressed at the point where jewelry meets the boundary of the person, that is, as the jewelry is worn.

And to gain that fluency, the designer must commit to learning a lot of vocabulary, ideas and terms, and how these imply content and meaning through expression. The designer will need to be very aware of personal thoughts and thinking as these get reflected in all the choices made in design. The designer will have to be good at anticipating the understandings and judgements of many different audiences, including the wearer, viewer, seller, buyer, exhibitor, client, collector, teacher and student.

With fluency comes empowerment. The empowered designer has a confidence that whatever needs to be done, …

Continue reading on my JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB.



SOME POSTS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED:

PODCAST: WHY JEWELRY IS LIKE ARCHITECTURE

JTV: PETERSBURG CHAIN ROPE

ARCHIVE: THE UGLY NECKLACE CONTESTUpcoming Classes and 

Workshops by Warren Feld

Sat, 4/26, 1–4, PEARL KNOTTING, Hoamsy, Nashville, Fait La Force Brewery,1414 3rd Ave S, Ste 101, Nashville
Register: https://www.hoamsy.com/experiences/detail/z1IFcpOwTimeKRYk1akv

Sat, 6/7, 1–4, WIRE WRAPPED CABOCHON PENDANT, Hoamsy, Nashville, Nashville, Fait La Force Brewery,1414 3rd Ave S, Ste 101, Nashville
Register :https://www.hoamsy.com/experiences/detail/6azTthSZL5h76jCqKjNp

9/15/2025–10/15/2025 Art Jewelry Exhibit at Pryor Gallery, Columbia State Community College
My pieces will be showcased an this exhibit. In the works is a possible Seminar and a beading workshop.


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Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Where Can I Sell My Jewelry?

Posted by learntobead on April 11, 2025

Where Can I Sell My Jewelry?

There are lots and lots of places for selling your jewelry. These include,

1. Wear It and Sell It

2. To Friends, Family and Work-Mates

3. Retail and Wholesale Stores

4. Consignment Shops

5. Art and Crafts Fairs, Flea Markets, Bazaars

6. Jewelry Parties, Home Shows

7. Trunk Shows

8. Galleries

9. Online

10. Catalogs

As well as through Trade Shows, TV and Radio, Webcasts, Through Sales Reps and Agencies, and many more options for profitable venues.

1. Wear it and Sell It

Yes, people do buy jewelry off your back, so to speak. You might be standing in line at the supermarket. Or attending a concert. Or sitting in the shade at a table in a local park. People will come up to you, marvel at your jewelry, and ask if they can buy it.

So, wear your favorite pieces and flaunt them.

2. To Friends, Family and Work-Mates

Arrange showings of your jewelry with friends, families and people you work with. They know you, and you know them….

Continue reading on my JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB

____________________________________________________________________
Conquering The Creative Marketplace

Many people learn beadwork and jewelry-making in order to sell the pieces they make. Based both on the creation and development of my own jewelry design business, as well as teaching countless students over the past 35+ years about business and craft, I want to address what should be some of your key concerns and uncertainties. I want to share with you the kinds of things (specifically, a business mindset and confidence) it takes to start your own jewelry business, run it, anticipate risks and rewards, and lead it to a level of success you feel is right for you. I want to help you plan your road map.

I will explore answers to such questions as: How does someone get started marketing and selling their pieces? What business fundamentals need to be brought to the fore? How do you measure risk and return on investment? How does the creative person develop and maintain a passion for business? To what extent should business decisions affect artistic choices? What similar traits to successful jewelry designers do those in business share? How do you protect your intellectual property?

The major topics covered include,

1. Integrating Business With Design

2. Getting Started

3. Financial Management

4. Product Development, Creating Your Line, and Pricing

5. Marketing, Promotion, Branding

6. Selling

7. Professional Responsibilities and Strategic Planning

8. Professional Responsibilities and Gallery / Boutique Representation

9. Professional Responsibilities and Creating Your Necessary Written Documents

548pp, many images and diagrams
Kindle or Ebook or Print

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Q1: Art, Craft or Design?

Posted by learntobead on April 7, 2025

Question 1: Should BEADWORK and JEWELRY MAKING be considered ART or CRAFT or DESIGN?

The jewelry designer confronts a world which is unsure whether jewelry is “craft” or “art” or its own special thing I’ll call “design”. This can get very confusing and unsettling. Each approach has its own separate ideas about how the designer should think, speak, work, and how he or she should be judged.

CRAFT: When defined as “craft,” jewelry is seen as something that anyone can do — no special powers are needed to be a jewelry designer. Design is seen as a step-by-step process, almost like paint-by-number. Designers color within the lines. The craft piece or project has functional value but limited aesthetic value. As “craft”, there is somewhat of a pejorative meaning — it’s looked down upon, thought of as something less than art.

If following the Craft Approach, the designer would learn a lot of techniques and applications in a step-by-step fashion. The designer, based on their professional socialization into Craft, would assume that:

a) The outlines and the goals of any piece or project can be specified in a clear, defined way.

b) Anyone can do these techniques.

c) There is no specialized knowledge that a designer needs to know beyond how to do these step-by-step techniques and applications.

d) If a particular designer has a strong sense of design, this is something innate and cannot be learned or taught.

e) There is little need to vary or adapt these techniques and applications.

f) The primary goal is functionality.

g) There are no consequences if you have followed the steps correctly.

As “craft”, we still recognize the interplay of the artist’s hand with the piece and the storytelling underlying it. We honor the technical prowess. People love to bring art into their personal worlds, and the craftsperson offers them functional objects which have some artistic sensibilities.

ART: When defined as “art”, jewelry is seen as something which transcends itself and its design. It is not something that anyone can do without special insights and training. The goal of any project would be harmony with a little variety, and some satisfaction and approval.

Continue reading on my JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB
https://www.patreon.com/posts/fluency-in-q1-or-117173716?utm_medium=clipboard_copy&utm_source=copyLink&utm_campaign=postshare_creator&utm_content=join_link

_______________________________________________________

Thanks for being here. I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.

WarrenFeldJewelry.com
Shop.warrenfeldjewelry.com
School.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Coaching by Warren Feld

Add your name to my email list.

SO YOU WANT TO BE A JEWELRY DESIGNER
Merging Your Voice With Form

So You Want To Be A Jewelry Designer reinterprets how to apply techniques and modify art theories from the Jewelry Designer’s perspective. To go beyond craft, the jewelry designer needs to become literate in this discipline called Jewelry Design. Literacy means understanding how to answer the question: Why do some pieces of jewelry draw your attention, and others do not? How to develop the authentic, creative self, someone who is fluent, flexible and original. How to gain the necessary design skills and be able to apply them, whether the situation is familiar or not.

588pp, many images and diagrams Ebook , Kindle or Print formats

The Jewelry Journey Podcast
“Building Jewelry That Works: Why Jewelry Design Is Like Architecture”
Podcast, Part 1
Podcast, Part 2

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Your First Jewelry Sale

Posted by learntobead on April 4, 2025

Often Unexpected, Always Exciting:
Your First Jewelry Sale

How many times have you heard a jewelry artist say…

I can’t bear to part with my pieces.

My jewelry is too precious to me.

I only give a few pieces that I make away as gifts to friends and family.

I’ve never sold anything.

Selling would take the fun out of it.

And then, while you are filling your cart in the grocery store, someone offers to buy a piece you are wearing, and the rest is history. A sale! Sold! They paid so much more than it cost you! Right off your wrist! Gotta make another! That was so fast! That was so easy!

My friend Connie used to make things only for friends. She always wore the things she made. At one point, she was repeatedly approached in various stores around town by women who wanted to buy the pieces around her neck.

At first, Connie quoted them, what she thought were outlandish prices. No one hesitated. Connie was awe-struck, but didn’t say No. I don’t know if she secretly wore a sign on her back — JEWELRY FOR SALE — or, somehow stuck out her cheek in such a way, as if asking to be kissed, that people came over to her, but she was getting quite good at attracting buyers. At TJMAX, at TARGET, at MACY’s, at DILLARDS, at SEARS, at KROGERS and PUBLIX. She kept upping her prices each time, and no one had yet to blink!

Jona had made many things before, but had never sold anything. Then…

FINISH READING ON MY JEWELRY DESIGNERS’ HUB


Thanks for being here. I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.

WarrenFeldJewelry.com
Shop.warrenfeldjewelry.com
School.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Coaching by Warren Feld

Add your name to my email list.

Conquering The Creative Marketplace

Many people learn beadwork and jewelry-making in order to sell the pieces they make. Based both on the creation and development of my own jewelry design business, as well as teaching countless students over the past 35+ years about business and craft, I want to address what should be some of your key concerns and uncertainties. I want to share with you the kinds of things (specifically, a business mindset and confidence) it takes to start your own jewelry business, run it, anticipate risks and rewards, and lead it to a level of success you feel is right for you. I want to help you plan your road map.

I will explore answers to such questions as: How does someone get started marketing and selling their pieces? What business fundamentals need to be brought to the fore? How do you measure risk and return on investment? How does the creative person develop and maintain a passion for business? To what extent should business decisions affect artistic choices? What similar traits to successful jewelry designers do those in business share? How do you protect your intellectual property?

The major topics covered include,

1. Integrating Business With Design

2. Getting Started

3. Financial Management

4. Product Development, Creating Your Line, and Pricing

5. Marketing, Promotion, Branding

6. Selling

7. Professional Responsibilities and Strategic Planning

8. Professional Responsibilities and Gallery / Boutique Representation

9. Professional Responsibilities and Creating Your Necessary Written Documents

548pp, many images and diagrams
Kindle or Ebook or Print

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

FLUENCY IN JEWELRY DESIGN: Fluency and Empowerment

Posted by learntobead on March 31, 2025

Fluency and Empowerment

The fluent jewelry designer is able to think like a designer. The jewelry designer is more than a craftsperson and more than an artist. The jewelry designer must learn a specialized language, and specialized way of balancing the needs for appeal with the needs for functionality. The jewelry designer must intimately recognize and understand the roles jewelry plays for individuals as well as the society as a whole. The designer must learn how art, architecture, physical mechanics, engineering, sociology, psychology, context, even party planning, all must come together and get expressed at the point where jewelry meets the boundary of the person, that is, as the jewelry is worn.

And to gain that fluency, the designer must commit to learning a lot of vocabulary, ideas and terms, and how these imply content and meaning through expression. The designer will need to be very aware of personal thoughts and thinking as these get reflected in all the choices made in design. The designer will have to be good at anticipating the understandings and judgements of many different audiences, including the wearer, viewer, seller, buyer, exhibitor, client, collector, teacher and student.

With fluency comes empowerment. The empowered designer has a confidence that whatever needs to be done, or whatever must come next, the designer can get through it. Empowerment is about making and managing choices. These choices could be as simple as whether to finish a piece or not. Or whether to begin a second piece. Or which materials or techniques should be used. The designer will make choices about how to draw someone’s attention to the piece, or present the piece to a larger audience. She or he may decide to submit the piece to a magazine or contest. She or he may want to sell the piece and market it. The designer will make choices about how a piece might be worn, or who might wear it, or when it might be worn, in what context.

And for all these choices, the jewelry designer might need to overcome a sense of fear, boredom, or resistance. The designer might need to overcome anxiety, a sense of giving up, having designer’s block, feeling unchallenged, and even laziness.

In order to make better artistic and design choices, the Fluent and Empowered Jewelry Designer should have answers to 5 critical questions.

_______________________________________________________

Thanks for being here. I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.

WarrenFeldJewelry.com
Shop.warrenfeldjewelry.com
School.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Coaching by Warren Feld

Add your name to my email list.

SO YOU WANT TO BE A JEWELRY DESIGNER
Merging Your Voice With Form

So You Want To Be A Jewelry Designer reinterprets how to apply techniques and modify art theories from the Jewelry Designer’s perspective. To go beyond craft, the jewelry designer needs to become literate in this discipline called Jewelry Design. Literacy means understanding how to answer the question: Why do some pieces of jewelry draw your attention, and others do not? How to develop the authentic, creative self, someone who is fluent, flexible and original. How to gain the necessary design skills and be able to apply them, whether the situation is familiar or not.

588pp, many images and diagrams Ebook , Kindle or Print formats

The Jewelry Journey Podcast
“Building Jewelry That Works: Why Jewelry Design Is Like Architecture”
Podcast, Part 1
Podcast, Part 2

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

CONQUERING THE CREATIVE MARKETPLACE: Let Business Influence Art

Posted by learntobead on March 28, 2025

Let Business Concerns Influence Your Artistic Choices

To what extent do (and should) business concerns influence the artistic choices bead and jewelry artists make?

If you want to be in business, then I’d say, “A Lot!” But this isn’t what a lot of designers like to hear. Success in business takes something besides being an excellent jewelry designer.

Jewelry making is not a passive art. You make jewelry for others to wear and buy, and you have to anticipate how they will assess your work and recognize your artistry. It is not the same as painting a painting or sculpting a sculpture in the sense that with paintings or sculptures, the artist does not need to communicate interactively with the viewer in order to create the product and be deemed successful. Jewelry making, instead, is more an interactive art. It is like architecture, where success can only be created through some kind of dialectic with others, and only be defined as successful as the product is introduced publicly and understood by others as finished and successful.

Selling your pieces is merely another phase of this interactive art, but sometimes forces upon you some more limits and refinements. You have to market to audiences. You may have to standardize things to be able to make the same thing over and over again. You may have to work in a production mode and repeat making certain designs, rather than freely creating and designing anew each time. You have to price things so that they will sell, and you have to price things so that you can make a sufficient profit. You do not (which translates as never) undersell yourself, like offering discounts to family, friends and co-workers.

You have to conform to prevalent styles and colors and forms. You have to make things which will photograph well for sale online. You have to make things that local stores want and are willing to buy or put on consignment. You may end up with a lot of “one size fits all,” because producing too much variety in sizes, shapes, colors and sizes could overwhelm you financially.

You find that if you want to make your jewelry design into a successful business, you may have to compromise with yourself, your artistic drives and sensibilities. You may have to limit what you offer. In order to make that sale. In order to make a profit. In order to establish your brand and how it is recognized. And stay in business.

As You Get Started,
Ask Yourself These Questions

1. After honestly evaluating my hard and soft skills, am I business-ready?

2. Are there potential customers who will want, need and demand the kinds of jewelry I design?

3. Can I price my products competitively?

4. Where do I want to sell my pieces?

5. Can I get my pieces the visibility and opportunities to get purchased, given where I want to sell my pieces?

6. What are my competitive advantages? How do my works and my business strategies differentiate myself from my competition?

7. Are my pieces consistent and coherent enough to be recognized and understood as a brand, and as a brand designed by me?

8. Do I feel I can organize, manage, control and keep updated all the business functions – Design, Financial Management, Production and Distribution, Marketing and Branding, and Selling, Feedback and Evaluation?

_______________________________________________________

For more articles about Conquering The Creative Marketplace, click over to our Jewelry Designers’ Hub

_______________________________________________________

Thanks for being here. I look forward to sharing more resources, tips,
sources of inspiration and insights with you.

WarrenFeldJewelry.com
Shop.warrenfeldjewelry.com
School.warrenfeldjewelry.com
Coaching by Warren Feld

Add your name to my email list.

Conquering The Creative Marketplace

Many people learn beadwork and jewelry-making in order to sell the pieces they make. Based both on the creation and development of my own jewelry design business, as well as teaching countless students over the past 35+ years about business and craft, I want to address what should be some of your key concerns and uncertainties. I want to share with you the kinds of things (specifically, a business mindset and confidence) it takes to start your own jewelry business, run it, anticipate risks and rewards, and lead it to a level of success you feel is right for you. I want to help you plan your road map.

I will explore answers to such questions as: How does someone get started marketing and selling their pieces? What business fundamentals need to be brought to the fore? How do you measure risk and return on investment? How does the creative person develop and maintain a passion for business? To what extent should business decisions affect artistic choices? What similar traits to successful jewelry designers do those in business share? How do you protect your intellectual property?

The major topics covered include,

1. Integrating Business With Design

2. Getting Started

3. Financial Management

4. Product Development, Creating Your Line, and Pricing

5. Marketing, Promotion, Branding

6. Selling

7. Professional Responsibilities and Strategic Planning

8. Professional Responsibilities and Gallery / Boutique Representation

9. Professional Responsibilities and Creating Your Necessary Written 
 Documents

548pp, many images and diagrams
Kindle or Ebook or Print

Posted in architecture, Art or Craft?, art theory, bead stringing, bead weaving, beads, beadwork, business of craft, color, Contests, craft, craft shows, creativity, cruises, design management, design theory, design thinking, enrichment travel, Entrepreneurship, handmade jewelry, jewelry, jewelry collecting, jewelry design, jewelry making, Learn To Bead, literacy, pearl knotting, professional development, Resources, Stitch 'n Bitch, Travel Opportunities, wire and metal, Workshops, Classes, Exhibits | Tagged: , , , , | Leave a Comment »

THE JEWELERS’ PALLETTE, 4/1/2025

Posted by learntobead on March 27, 2025


From Warren and
Land of Odds
Join my community of jewelry designers on my Patreon hub
April 1, 2025
Sign up for a Free or Paid Subscription

[Note: Paid Subscribers on Patreon Hub get 25% Off @Land of Odds]

www.landofodds.com

Hi everyone,

Some Updates and Things Happening.
(Please share this newsletter)

In this Issue:
1. Some highlights from the recent ORNAMENT magazine
2. Mastering the art of talking about your jewelry in public
3. Some advice about self promotion
4. Smithsonian Craft2Wear Show, September 26–28, 2025, APPLY NOW
5. What does it mean to foster a Growth Mindset?
6. Are the days of men’s jewelry worn solely as symbol of power and wealth gone for good?
7. Call for entries: Richmond CRAFT+DESIGN
8. Clever phrases/aphorisms/memes for artists of all kinds
Some articles you may have missed


1. Some highlights from the recent ORNAMENT magazine

I received my most recent issue of one of my favorite magazines — ORNAMENT. Here are some highlights.

New books:

Articles:

Ancient Craft Skills and the Contemporary Craftsperson

Nikki Couppee Showcase

There are many other jewelry designers highlighted, as is New York City Jewelry Week.


2. Mastering the art of talking about your jewelry in public

Speaking about your work publicly can be both exciting and nerve-wracking. Here are some key tips to confidently and effectively share your work:

a. Know Your Story (Inspirations, getting started, techniques and materials)

b. Develop a Clear 30 second Elevator Pitch (engage in 30 seconds; focus on what makes your jewelry unique)

c. Speak with Passion and Confidence (enthusiasm is contagious; take your time and speak clearly, even if you are nervous)

d. Adapt to your Audience (what do you think your audience wants to hear? focus on process and inspiration; highlight your brand and craftsmanship; be conversational and authentic; tell stories and anecdotes and don’t lecture)

e. Prepare a Narrative (focus on crafting a story that encapsulates your artistic journey, the challenges, triumphs, pivotal moments, struggles, doubts you’ve overcome, mishaps, recurring themes in your work, how your themes relate to your personal story; a compelling narrative evokes emotion)

f. Show and Tell (be prepared to show and tell, whether you have your jewelry with you at the moment, or you share images or your portfolio on your cellphone)

g. Engage, Don’t Just Talk (be interactive; encourage questions; ask what people think, invite them to share their opinions or what they think; get their reactions to a piece of jewelry before you begin to talk about it; style preferences; be conversational; show genuine interest in their responses and respond with some detail to what they say; be patient with responses and allow your audience time to formulate and articulate their thoughts; resist the urge to fill silences too quickly; you can always start the conversation by talking about a question you get asked a lot)

h. Practice, Practice, Practice (outline your remarks or write it out like a script for a play; rehearse in front of a mirror or with a friend; record yourself and refine your delivery; I use a desktop/mobile app called LOOM, which has a free subscription option)

i. Be Ready For Questions (why use these, do this, not do this?; what do you like?; how long does this take?)

j. Provide Takeaways (at the end of your talk, summarize the key ‘learnings’; provide a brochure or postcard or business card that your audience can take with them, as a physical reminder of your work; provide an avenue for them to explore your work further or contact you for potential opportunities, purchases, collaborations)

k. End With A Call To Action (extend the conversation beyond the event; always end with a call to action: visit website; sign up for newsletter; take them on a tour)

l. Follow-Up (you want to build lasting relationships (invite audience to stay connected and give you their email addresses, other contact information; send a personalized thank you note or email shortly after event; repeat highlights of your talk, links to your work, information about where to find you next)

m. Reflect and Adapt (review the event/encounter; what resonated best/least; what feedback did the audience present; adjust previous steps accordingly)

n. Network and Connect (expand your professional circle and foster meaningful relationships with other jewelry designers as well as your client base; engage in one-on-one conversations with clients who seemed interested in your work; exchange contact information with fellow designers and any boutiques, galleries or other businesses that seemed interested in your work; discover new opportunities to keep you and your work visible)


3. I was reading this article about self promotion, and wanted to share this with you. Good stuff.

The Art of Self-Promotion: Building Identity and Crafting a Legacy

by Ivan Barnett, Klimt02, 3/17/2025

The Power of Being Yourself
Self-promotion often feels like an uncomfortable task for artists, but my first rule is simple: be yourself. There is no one way to self-promote, and the key is to find an approach that aligns with your personality. Authenticity is what draws people in — it’s not about forcing a persona but rather amplifying what makes you unique.

Let’s address social media, the most obvious self-promotional tool. Over the past half-decade, its impact has declined as big businesses have taken over. That doesn’t mean it’s useless — it just means you must use it wisely. Instead of treating social media as an advertising outlet, think of it as a storytelling tool. Show your process, your inspirations, and the personal side of your work. People connect with authenticity, not just finished products.

[His stated philosophy: Art is not something we create, it is who we are.]

Continue reading the article


4. 
Smithsonian Craft2Wear Show, September 26–28, 2025, APPLY NOW

The 2025 Smithsonian Craft2Wear Show is an exhibition and sale of wearable contemporary American craft (clothing, accessories and jewelry) held in Washington, DC at the beautiful Smithsonian Arts and Industries Building (AIB) on the National Mall. 

Electronic applications are due by Tuesday, April 15, 2025. A non-refundable fee of $30 must accompany each application.

APPLY NOW


5. What Does It Mean To Foster A Growth Mindset?

Failure is uncomfortable. Disconcerting. Too often, we do everything we can to keep ourselves out of situations where we might fail. We focus on what could go wrong, instead of what could go right. We think we don’t have the abilities to do the task. We get paralyzed. We do nothing. Or we keep repeating ourselves, producing the same-ole, same-ole, whether there is a continued market for these items, or not. Or we begin to visualize any risk as insurmountable, way bigger than it really is.

But allowing any fear of failure to become some kind of insurmountable wall works against us. If we are trying to make a go of it by selling our jewelry, we can’t build these kinds of walls. Successful business people and successful businesses need to foster a culture which promotes a growth mindset. Simply, a growth mindset is a culture where you have permission and encouragement and confidence to take risks.

Risks are OK because they bring rewards. Rewards allow the business to maintain itself, sustain itself, grow and expand.

Failures are OK, as well, as long as they become learning experiences.

Doubt and self-doubt are OK only if they are used to trigger reflection and new ideas to overcome them.

Not having the skills requisite for the moment is OK because we are all capable of continual learning.

Temporary setbacks are OK because you have had them before and overcame them.

Carol Dweck wrote the seminal book on growth mindsets called Mindset: The New Psychology of Success (2006), with a series of related books to follow. People have either a growth-mindset or a fixed-mindset.

Those with a growth-mindset believe their abilities are developed through continual learning and hard work. They are more willing to experiment and try new things, and see failures as opportunities rather than setbacks.

Those with a fixed-mindset believe that abilities are innate — you’re born with talents or not. They seek out opportunities where specific talents, rather than effort, leads to success. They prefer to repeat tasks and apply skills they are already familiar with.

Developing a growth mindset means such things as…

1. Understanding the power of “Not Yet”.

2. Setting learning and continual learning goals

3. Being deliberate and constantly challenging yourself

4. Asking for honest feedback and criticism

5. Always reflecting on and being very metacognitive about your thoughts and actions, successes and
 failures

6. Recognizing if you are stuck in a fixed-mindset, and acknowledging your weaknesses

7. Focusing on the process, and less-so on the result

8. Getting comfortable with self-affirmation, rather than needing the affirmation and approval of others


6. Are the days of men’s jewelry worn solely as symbol of power and wealth gone for good?

A look at men’s jewellery at GemGenève

The rebirth of jewellery for men since the 2010s is actually due to another factor altogether: men have changed the way they relate to jewels and jewellery in general, argues GemGenève co-founder Ronny Totah. Today, men account for up to 30% of jewellery purchases from certain collections by brands and independent craftsmen and women.

View other men’s jewelry and Read responses to this question here.
https://klimt02.net/forum/articles/look-mens-jewellery-gemgeneve


7. Call for entries: Richmond CRAFT+DESIGN

Begin application process here
https://juriedartservices.net/events/2188


8. Clever phrases/aphorisms/memes for artists of all kinds

I am a member of the Columbia Arts Council. For an event, we are going to pass out stickers. I generated a sampling of sayings that could go on the stickers, and I’m sharing them with you. Thought you’d get a chuckle out of these.

General Creativity & Art

  1. Create like nobody’s watching.
  2. Messy hands, brilliant mind.
  3. Art: cheaper than therapy.
  4. Make art, not excuses.
  5. Doubt kills more art than failure ever will.
  6. Every artist was first an amateur.
  7. Creativity is intelligence having fun.
  8. I speak fluent paint splatter.
  9. Art is my love language.
  10. Reality is overrated — paint me another one.
  11. The world is my canvas, and I’m out of control.
  12. Perfectly imperfect — just like my art.
  13. Stay weird, stay creative.
  14. Warning: Contains excessive imagination.
  15. Creativity takes courage — and a lot of snacks.

Makers & Hands-On Artists

  1. Handmade with sarcasm and love.
  2. Makers gonna make.
  3. I make things. What’s your superpower?
  4. Handcrafted with reckless precision.
  5. This is what ‘made with love’ looks like.
  6. I turn coffee into art.
  7. Saw dust is my glitter.
  8. I make because I must.
  9. Perfection is boring. Make something weird.
  10. Measure twice, cut once, cry anyway.
  11. My blood type is glue and glitter.
  12. I can’t. I have a project.
  13. Made by hand, heart, and a little bit of chaos.
  14. Mistakes are just creative detours.
  15. Cut. Sew. Cry. Repeat.

Painting & Drawing

  1. Watercolor outside the lines.
  2. Oil paint runs in my veins.
  3. Sketch today, masterpiece tomorrow.
  4. More paint, less perfection.
  5. I draw, therefore I am.
  6. Happy little accidents happen daily.
  7. Smudges are just love marks from my art.
  8. Inking my way through life.
  9. My brush dances to its own tune.
  10. If you see me clean, I’m out of paint.

Jewelry Making & Beading

  1. Bead it like you mean it.
  2. I like big beads and I cannot lie.
  3. Stringing together happiness, one bead at a time.
  4. Jewelry is art you can wear.
  5. Beading: because therapy is expensive.
  6. If lost, check the bead store.
  7. Some collect memories; I collect beads.
  8. Beading is my cardio.
  9. Life is too short for boring jewelry.
  10. More beads, less stress.

Creative Process & Inspiration

  1. Inspiration hits at inconvenient times.
  2. Chaos is just creativity’s warm-up.
  3. Creativity is a work in progress.
  4. Start before you’re ready.
  5. Don’t wait for inspiration — just start.
  6. Creativity thrives in the mess.
  7. Done is better than perfect.
  8. There’s no such thing as too many ideas.
  9. Creativity: where the fun begins and logic ends.
  10. You can’t rush art — but you can procrastinate it.

Art & Business

  1. Starving artist? No, thriving artist.
  2. Yes, it’s handmade. No, it’s not cheaper.
  3. Support artists — buy art, not mass production.
  4. Art is work. Pay accordingly.
  5. Artists don’t work for exposure.
  6. Yes, I make art. No, I won’t do it for free.
  7. DIY: Because hiring professionals costs money.
  8. Just because I enjoy it doesn’t mean I’ll do it for free.
  9. I create. You buy. Everyone’s happy.
  10. Respect the artist. Respect the craft.

Music & Performing Arts

  1. Life’s better with a soundtrack.
  2. Dancers don’t sweat, they sparkle.
  3. Sing like you mean it.
  4. Break a leg — but not my instruments.
  5. Music is what feelings sound like.
  6. The stage is my happy place.
  7. Dance first, think later.
  8. Creativity has no volume control.
  9. When in doubt, just improvise.
  10. Make music, not noise.

Writing & Literature

  1. Write your own story.
  2. Plot twist: I need more coffee.
  3. My brain is 90% plot ideas and 10% snacks.
  4. Poetic soul, chaotic mind.
  5. Editing is just rewriting with regret.
  6. Too many tabs open — some are story ideas.
  7. I write. What’s your superpower?
  8. Procrastinating? No, I’m world-building.
  9. My characters made me do it.
  10. Caution: Writer at work — approach with snacks.

Quirky & Funny

  1. Oops, I arted.
  2. Eat. Sleep. Create. Repeat.
  3. More glue, less stress.
  4. Why fit in when you can stand out?
  5. I make, therefore I am.
  6. Art teachers gave up on me; now they buy my work.
  7. Creativity: The only mess that’s worth it.
  8. Not all who wander are lost… some are just looking for inspiration.
  9. This shirt contains 100% recycled creative energy.
  10. The best ideas come at 2 AM and disappear by 7 AM.

UPCOMING WORKSHOPS by Warren Feld

Sat, 4/12, 2–3, LET’S MAKE EARRINGS, Maury County Library, 211 W 8th St, Columbia, TN
Register: Call (931) 375–6502

Sat, 4/26, 1–4, PEARL KNOTTING, Hoamsy, Nashville, Fait La Force Brewery,1414 3rd Ave S, Ste 101, Nashville
Register: https://www.hoamsy.com/experiences/detail/z1IFcpOwTimeKRYk1akv

Sat, 6/7, 1–4, WIRE WRAPPED CABOCHON PENDANT, Hoamsy, Nashville, Nashville, Fait La Force Brewery,1414 3rd Ave S, Ste 101, Nashville
Register: https://www.hoamsy.com/experiences/detail/6azTthSZL5h76jCqKjNp

SOME POSTS YOU MAY HAVE MISSED:

TYPES OF JEWELRY MAKING and What You Need To Learn

EDUCATIONAL RUBRIC: Learning To Think Like A Jewelry Designer

THE JEWELRY DESIGN PHILOSOPHY: Not Art, Not Craft, But Design!


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