is also used to construct the necklace. Beadwork is the art or craft of attaching bead s to one another ... beadwork takes the form of jewellery jewelry or other personal adornment, but beads are also used in wall hangings and sculpture . Beadwork techniques are broadly divided into Bead weaving loom and Bead ... Modern beadwork is often used as a creative hobby to create jewelry , Handbag purse s, coasters, and dozens ... than an hour by novice beaders, while complex beadwork may take weeks of meticulous work with specialized ... which provide 3D animal, heart and jewelry patterns in English. European beadworkBeadwork ... Bead weaving Off loom bead weaving off loom techniques. Native American beadwork File Nat Am beadwork sampler.jpg thumb right 230px Examples of contemporary Native American beadworkBeadwork is a quintessentially ... applied them to beadwork. ref Dubin, p. 50 ref Great Lakes tribes are known for their bandolier bags ... tribes, such as the Nez Perce tribe Nez Perce perfected contour style beadwork, in which the lines ... dance regalia for man and women feature a variety of beadwork styles. While Plains and Plateau ... floral dog blankets. ref Berlo and Philips, p. 151 ref Eastern tribes have a completely different beadwork ... approach to beadwork. They adhere beads, one by one, to a surface, such as wood or a gourd, with a mixture ... beadwork is created for tribal use but beadworkers also create conceptual work for the art world. Richard ... for her beadwork, which consciously integrates both traditional and contemporary motifs, such as beaded ... Martha Berry , Cherokee , have effectively revived Southeastern beadwork, a style that had been lost because of forced removal from tribes to Indian Territory. Their beadwork commonly features white ... and tutorials illustrated beadwork textile arts decorative arts Prehistoric technology Category Arts and crafts Category BeadworkBeadwork da Perlesyning he ja ru ... more details
Square stitch is an off loom bead weaving stitch textile arts stitch that mimics the appearance of beadwork created on a loom. Loom patterns may be used for square stitch pieces. Because each bead in a square stitch piece is connected by thread to each of the four beads surrounding it, this stitch is very strong. beadwork textile arts stub Category Weaving Category Beadwork ... more details
Peranakan Cut Beads the Peranakan term is Manek potong ref Ho Wing Meng, Straits Chinese Beadwork & Embroidery A Collector s Guide , Times Books International. 1987. ISBN 9971 651 947. Pages 38 48. ref are faceted glass bead s used by Peranakan women to make Peranakan beaded slippers kasot manek and other Peranakan artifacts like wedding veil s, handbag s, belts, tapestries , pouch es, etc. The beads used in the past were very tiny multi faceted glass seed beads from Europe . For the beaded slippers, both smooth and faceted beads were used to form the pattern. Nowadays, the bead size commonly in use for Peranakan beadwork are sizes 15 to 18 the larger the size number, the smaller the bead . Modern day faceted beads are single faceted seed bead s, usually referred to as charlotte beads or charlottes . These beads are usually from the Czech Republic . Notes reflist beadwork Category Beadwork china stub ... more details
The Brick Stitch , also known as the Cheyenne Stitch or Comanche Stitch , is a bead weaving stitch textile arts stitch with unknown origins in which individual beads are stacked upon each other much as brick s are stacked in a brick wall. The technique has been used by Indigenous peoples of the Americas Native Americans for many years. It has also been found in beadwork in Africa, the Middle East, and South America Guatemala n examples use beads of size 22 0 and smaller. ref Borin, Lydia F, Brick Stitch History , http www.beadwrangler.com samplers brickstitch brick stitch history accessed 2006 12 29 ref As the other names imply this is an off loom technique perfected by the Native Americans. It is a relative of another off loom technique called Peyote stitch or Gourd Stitch. ref About Native American Beadwork , http www.coyotesgame.com NAbeads.html accessed 2006 12 29 ref A Brick Stitch pattern can be worked as a Peyote Stitch Pattern if you turn it 90 degrees. See also Quillwork References cite book last Fitzgerald first Diane title Beading with Brick Stitch publisher Interweave Press, Loveland, CO year 2001 url http www.interweave.com bead books brick stitch.asp references beadwork Category Beadwork Category Native American art Category Cheyenne tribe Category Comanche tribe decorative art stub textile arts stub ... more details
. She has expanded her skills by developing elaborate beadwork art. She taught herself the lost art of Cherokee beadwork by studying photographs of artifacts and examining Cherokee beaded artifacts ... bag s, moccasin s, belts, knee bands, purses and sashes. She often uses beadwork designs that evolved from pre Contact Mississippian pottery into traditional 18th and 19th century Southeastern beadwork ... for her beadwork at the Cherokee Art Market, the Five Civilized Tribes Museum , the Heard Museum ... beadwork at the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia the Bead Museum in Glendale, AZ Tyler ... visited their collections to do further research into pre Removal Southeastern beadwork, which has informed her own work. Berry recently curated Beadwork Storytellers A Visual Language , a Cherokee beadwork ... 17 March 2009 ref The exhibition included beadwork from Scottish collections which had not been ... External links http www.berrybeadwork.com Martha Berry Cherokee Beadwork Artist. https www.allthingscherokee.com .... References references beadwork North American Indigenous visual artists Persondata Metadata see ... more details
Infobox magazine logo logo size image file cover.jpg omit the file prefix image size defaults to user thumbnail size if no size is stated image alt image caption editor editor title previous editor staff writer photographer category Beadwork frequency Quarterly ref name boutique http www.boutique sha.co.jp book company info Boutique Co., Inc. &ndash About Us ref circulation publisher Nihongo Boutique Co. Butikkusha founder founded 2003 ref name worldcat http www.worldcat.org title bizu friend v1 oclc 674759709&referer brief results B zu Furendo Vol. 1, Issue 1 at WorldCat ref firstdate Start date year month day company country Japan based Tokyo ref name boutique language Japanese language Japanese website URL example.com issn oclc Nihongo Bead Friend B zu Furendo lead yes is a Japanese quarterly beadwork magazine published by Nihongo Boutique Co. Butikkusha since 2003. ref name boutique ref name worldcat See also Arts and crafts Bead Bead&Button Creative Beading Decorative arts Jewelry designer References Reflist Category Beadwork Category Hobby magazines Category Japanese magazines Category Magazines established in 2003 Category Quarterly magazines Hobby mag stub ... more details
Infobox magazine logo logo size image file cover.jpg omit the file prefix image size defaults to user thumbnail size if no size is stated image alt image caption editor Julia Gerlach ref name about http bnb.jewelrymakingmagazines.com en Magazine About 20the 20Magazine 2007 01 About 20BeadandButton.aspx About Bead&Button ref editor title previous editor staff writer photographer category Beadwork frequency Bimonthly circulation publisher Kalmbach Publishing founder founded firstdate Start date year month day company country United States based Waukesha, Wisconsin language English website URL example.com issn oclc Bead&Button is an American bimonthly beadwork magazine published by Kalmbach Publishing . ref name about The magazine is headquartered in Waukesha, Wisconsin . ref http bnb.jewelrymakingmagazines.com Press 20Room.aspx Bead&Button Magazine Pressroom ref Kalmbach Publishing occasionally publishes themed Beast of Bead&Button books, which gather together various projects on a common aesthetic or material. See also Arts and crafts Bead Bead Friend Creative Beading Decorative arts Jewelry designer References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Bead & Button Category American magazines Category Beadwork Category Bi monthly magazines Category Hobby magazines Category Magazines published in Wisconsin Category Waukesha, Wisconsin Hobby mag stub ... more details
orphan date January 2011 Big Hole Beads or large hole beads are considered by artisan s who make their own jewelry to be beads with holes 3mm in diameter or larger, although many purist s will argue that any bead with a hole larger than 1mm is a big hole bead. They are also called large hole beads. These beads may be made of various materials though most commonly used materials to create big hole beads are glass , metal and plastic Acrylic fiber acrylic . Category Beadwork ... more details
Unreferenced date September 2008 Aggry beads also spelled aggri beads or aggrey beads are a type of decorated glass bead from Ghana , used by West Africans as Decorative arts ornament s in necklace s, bracelet s and other jewellery. One bead can cost 15. fact date November 2011 Aggry beads are are also called Koli, Cori, Kor, Segi, Accori, or Ekeur. They are often used for medicinal purposes, as it is believed that they have magical powers. Beads were used for exchange and as a way of payment during trade in Africa. Europeans first collected aggry beads from the West Coast of Africa in the fifteenth century. Their origin is obscure see http www.thebeadsite.com bnaf agg.htm . They are made from glass or meteorites . Sometimes millefiore beads are called Aggrey , but this may be incorrect. External links http www.he artefakte.de Europa Ethnologie KettenPerlen KettenE.html KettenE beadwork textile arts stub Category Beadwork de Akori Perlen ... more details
heroes in his beadwork, such as Lloyd Kiva New, as well a pop icons, such as Janet Jackson, and imagery ... of Arts and Design . ref McFadden and Taubman, 240 ref He is the only artist to have his beadwork ... The Universe of Marcus Amerman, The Magazine via Santa Fe.com beadwork Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia ... more details
frame pidangan ref Eng Lee Seok Chee, Festive Expressions Nonya Beadwork and Embroidery , National ... slippers, and may be either made with low or high heels. Notes reflist beadwork DEFAULTSORT Peranakan Beaded Slippers Category Shoes Category Malay clothing Category Indonesian clothing Category Beadwork ... more details
File Bead embroidery jeans.jpg right thumb 250px A pair of denim jeans embroidered with freshwater pearls and seed bead s. Bead embroidery is a type of beadwork that uses a needle and thread to stitch beads to a surface of fabric, suede, or leather. Bead embroidery is an embellishment that does not form an essential part of a textile s structure. In this respect, bead embroidery differs from bead weaving , bead crochet , and bead knitting . Woven, knitted, and crocheted beads may be attached during fabric production, whereas embroidered beads are always added upon finished fabric. File Bead embroidery scroll frame.jpg left thumb Bead embroidery during construction a brooch in pearl and lead crystal on ultrasuede , attached to a Embroidery hoop scroll frame . Traditionally, bead embroidery has been used on clothing and decorative textiles. It may be used in jewelry with the addition of structural supports such as bracelet bands. Other clothing accessories such as belt buckles and handbags can be embroidered with beads, and household items such as pillows or boxes may be embellished with bead embroidery. When used with hard surfaces, bead patterns are measured and planned with seam allowances and attached after embroidery by means of glue or epoxy . Technique Three basic methods may be used to embroider with beads individual beads may be sewn directly onto fabric, or several beads may be run through a needle before running through the backing, or else a line of threaded beads may be laid upon a fabric and secured with couching stitches. ref name worldtex cite book title World Textiles A Visual Guide to Traditional Techniques author John Gillow and Bryan Sentance publisher Thames & Hudson date 1999 page 216 ref References Reflist beadwork Category Embroidery Category Beadwork ru ... more details
The Bead Museum is a museum of bead s located in Glendale, Arizona It is located at 5754 W. Glenn Drive. The Bead Museum was founded to establish a safe haven for a permanent collection of beads and adornments of all cultures, past and present, which would provide an enduring opportunity for the study and enjoyment of these magnificent examples of art and ingenuity. The Bead Museum serves the public through exhibitions and programs designed to heighten awareness of peoples ideas about themselves and their world through the study of beads. Used all over the world, these small, perforated objects speak of ancient links with people, places, and diverse community expressions. This unique museum was founded in 1984 by Gabrielle Liese and houses an international collection of over 100,000 beads and beaded artifacts. The museum features permanent and changing exhibitions, and education and outreach programs of lectures, tours, and classes for the visitor. External links http www.beadmuseumaz.org Official website coord missing Arizona beadwork DEFAULTSORT Bead Museum, The Category Art museums in Arizona Category Museums in Glendale, Arizona Category Decorative arts museums in the United States Category Fashion museums in the United States Category Beadwork Category Museums established in 1984 ... more details
Heishe or heishi pronounced hee shee ref name about.com Mitchell, Elizabeth October 25 2007 . http gosw.about.com od newmexicoartandshopping a heishijewelry.htm What You Need to Know About Native American Heishi Jewelry . about.com ref are small discs or tubes shaped beads made of organic shells or ground and polished stones. Its origins come from the Santo Domingo Pueblo Indians, New Mexico, before the use of metals in jewelry by that people. ref Sky Stone. http www.skystonetrading.com heishe.asp All about heishe . Retrieved on 2008 10 07. ref The name is the Santo Domingo Indian word for shell bead. ref name CWPC cite book title Creating with Polymer Clay author Steven Ford and Leslie Dierks pages 10 publisher Lark Books date 1999 isbn 093727495X isbn13 9780937274958 ref The oldest specimens of Heishe date back to around 6000 BCE ref name about.com , although the same technique was used in northern Africa 30,000 years ago, using ostrich eggshell. ref name CWPC Modern heishi beads are commonly mechanically mass produced however, some artists still handmake beads. The beads are hand chipped, with holes drilled through their centers using pointed stones. ref name CWPC References Reflist Beadwork Category Jewellery components Category Native American art Category Beadwork Category Seashells in art fashion stub NorthAm native stub ... more details
Kandy may refer to Kandy , a city in the centre of Sri Lanka Kandy District , its district Kandy Electoral District Kandy Lake Kingdom of Kandy , an independent monarchy on Sri Lanka between the 15th and 19th centuries Kandy Nehova , Namibian politician Heraklion , the capital of Crete, was at certain periods known as Kandiye or Kandia Candy raver Beadwork Kandy with many variant spellings , bright plastic beads worn by candy ravers The KDE mobile phone application Kandy See also Candi disambiguation Candy disambiguation Kandi disambiguation disambig nl Kandy ru ... more details
File Halskette mit Kreuzanh nger byzantinisch bail closeup.jpg right thumb 200px A cross necklace cross attached to a necklace by means of a curved bail. Sixth or seventh century. From the collection of the Museum of Byzantine Art, Berlin. A bail is a component of certain types of jewelry , mostly necklace s, that is used to attach a pendant or stone. ref Cite web url http en.mimi.hu jewelry bail.html title Bail accessdate 27 October 2011 ref The bail is normally placed in the center of the necklace where the pendant hangs. Some bails are made so a pendant can be attached after the necklace production is completed. This way, a necklace design can be mass produced for multiple companies and the pendants can be attached after the necklaces are shipped to them. References Reflist Category Jewellery making Category Beadwork Category Jewellery components fashion stub ... more details
File Pablino Diaz, Kiowa.jpg thumb Pablino Diaz Kiowa wearing a hair pipe breastplate, 1899 A Hair Pipe is a term for a wide slim bead , more than 1.5 inches wide, which were popular with Indigenous peoples of the Americas American Indians , particularly from the Great Plains and Northwest Plateau . In 1878, Joseph H. Sherburne became a trader to the Ponca people . The Ponca purchased great quantities of corn cob pipe s from Sherburne, but only used the stem of the pipes as beads. White Eagle Ponca White Eagle showed the trader a necklace made of the pipstems and asked if they could be ordered in bulk. Sherburne contacted S. A. Frost in New York about producing tubular bone beads and within a year, he had enough hair pipe beads to sell to the Ponca as well as other Indian traders. ref John C. Ewers Ewers, John C. http www.sil.si.edu DigitalCollections BAE Bulletin164 section4.htm The Substitution of the Bone Hair Pipe. Hair Pipes in Plains Indian Adornment A Study in Indian and White Ingenuity. retrieved 6 August 2011 ref Hair pipe beads were extremely popular from 1880 1910 and are still very common in powwow regalia today. These beads are used in chokers, breast plates, earrings, and necklaces worn by women and men. gallery class float right File Woolaroc Blackfoot Bone Hairpipe Breastplate 1885.jpg Blackfoot bone hair pipe breastplate, Woolaroc, Oklahoma, 1885 gallery Notes reflist External links commonscat Hair pipes http www.sil.si.edu DigitalCollections BAE Bulletin164 tptoc.htm Hair Pipes Indian Adornment 1957 John C. Ewers Smithsonian Institution Libraries beadwork DEFAULTSORT Hair Pipe Category Headgear Category Beadwork Category Great Plains tribal culture ... more details
name Johnson and Sheridan, 18 Artwork Greeves employs a variety of beadwork techniques in her art ... said, A long time ago, a Kiowa woman brought beadwork to her Kiowa people. She was compelled to express ... unknown artists before me, through beadwork. ref name McFadden and Taubman, 27 Honors Her beadwork ... product multi.cfm?Product ID BE00117 Teri Greeves, beaded shoes gallery beadwork North American ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Ultraviolet sensitive beads UV beads are bead s that change color in the presence of ultraviolet radiation . Ultraviolet rays are present in sunlight and light from various artificial sources, and can cause sunburn or skin cancer . The color change alerts the wearer to the presence of the radiation. When the beads are not exposed to ultraviolet rays, they are colour less and either translucent or Opacity optics opaque . However, when sunlight falls onto the beads, an instant colour change occurs, turning them red, orange, yellow, blue, or purple. The beads are water fast and functionality is not decreased by time. External links http www.teachersource.com catalog page Color Light Sound UV Detecting Products ?id 4b53c621679738e0d4062d4c3bae6328 Description of ultraviolet sensitive beads and related products http www.stevespanglerscience.com experiment 00000118 Category Beadwork Category Craft materials Category Jewellery components decorative art stub ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 French wire , also known as bullion or gimp , ref cite book last Sciama first Lidia D. coauthors Joanne Bubolz Eicher title Beads and bead makers gender, material culture, and meaning page 301 url http books.google.com books?id GUs5zzIHm MC&printsec frontcover&source gbs summary r&cad 0 PPA301,M1 publisher Berg Publishers date 1998 isbn 978 1 85973 995 2 ref is a fine coil of silver or gold filled wire used by jeweller s to conceal beading wire next to crimps and clasps. Proponents maintain that French wire gives jewelry an elegant, professionally finished look while also protecting and strengthening the ends of the beadwork. Also widely available in silver and gold plated wire, this less expensive version is more commonly used by hobbyist beaders on seed bead and knotted pearl projects. References reflist Category Jewellery components fashion stub ... more details
The ASU Indian Family is a trio of mascot s for Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, Arkansas . The family consists of Chief Big Track named for a prominent Osage chief , an unnamed brave and an unnamed princess. It is one of the few trios of athletics mascots for a university. The tradition, which had been dormant for years, was revived in 1996 by new athletic director Barry Dowd. During the process of reviving the tradition, Dowd sought permission and advice from the Cherokee and other local tribes on attire, dance and appearance. The various groups which restarted the tradition, including a former Brave and Princess, were responsible for the creation of all outfits. The beadwork was done by the Cherokee as well as tribes from Texas. Today the Family is run by the ASU Spirit Club, a joint venture of the school s Student Athletic Board and Student Government Association. Source http www.asuindians.com ViewArticle.dbml?DB OEM ID 7200&ATCLID 204610 ASU Indian Family from ASUIndians.com Category College mascots in the United States Category Arkansas State University ... more details
wiktionary Greeves wiktionary greeves Greeves may refer to Augustus Frederick Adolphus Greeves 1806 1874 , former Mayor of Melbourne and Member of Parliament in Melbourne, Australia Bert Greeves MBE 6 June 1906 , British engineer who founded Invacar Ltd in 1942 and Greeves motor cycles in 1953 Carji Greeves Medal , Australian rules football award Edward Greeves 1903 1963 , Australian rules footballer Greeves motorcycles , British motorcycle manufacturer producing motorcycles mainly for the trials and off road market Marion Greeves 1894 1979 , female member of the Senate of Northern Ireland Stuart Greeves KBE CB DSO and Bar MC and Bar 1897 1989 , British Indian Army officer Teri Greeves , award winning Kiowa Comanche Italian beadwork artist, living in Santa Fe, New Mexico surname disambiguation ... more details
Faturan in Middle Eastern beadwork refers to a variety of synthetic resins such as Bakelite used as a sort of imitation amber to make bead s, notably in the making of komboloi and misbaha . History Originally, Faturan was a brand of cast synthetic thermosetting phenol formaldehyde resin , similar to Bakelite , manufactured by Dr. H Traun u. Sohne of Hamburg . ref L. H. Baekeland, H. L. Bender, Phenol Resins and Resinoids , Industrial and Engineering Chemistry 17 3 225 237 1925 , doi 10.1021 ie50183a002 ref ref http www.plastiquarian.com index.php?id 2&subid 35 Plastics Historical Society Web Site ref Developed in the early 20th century, it became obsolete by the 1940s. In the bead trade Refimprove date April 2010 In the bead trade, faturan is often thought to be a mixture of natural amber shavings with other materials, and is described as having been invented in the Middle East in the 18th or 19th century. The first Bakelite arrived mainly to Turkey was in the form of drawer and furniture knobs and handles around 1909 1911. This is the time when the first prayer bead strands made of what we now call faturan started to appear on the market. The bead carvers, mainly in Turkey, were swift to understand that Bakelite was a material that could be well carved, had a great appearance and could imitate and replace amber. So they started making their own material mixing it with natural, vegetal or synthetic dyes, amber powder, various fillers and additives, etc. Each master also had his secret recipe, , even heating in various liquids and oils and making it undergo various physical or chemical processes to obtain the most beautiful aspect. The original and genuine Faturan beads were mainly red or yellow in all its shades. The last genuine faturan beads were made in 1940 mainly due ... and individual auction bidders. Notes references beadwork Category Phenolic resins Category Thermosetting plastics Category Beadwork science stub ... more details