All Digital Tutorials
8 items
Here you will find a collection of jewelry making video tutorials and pdf downloads. All digital products are emailed to...
We hang paintings on walls. We place sculpture on shelves. But jewelry lives on our body. It moves when we move. It warms to our skin. It absorbs light, air, memory, and time. Jewelry is not observed from a distance — it is carried with you throughout your daily lives.
This is what makes it the most personal art we own. At least for me. We may admire paintings from across a room, but jewelry asks us to participate.
Our jewelry lives with us and is present for the ordinary moments. Morning coffee, a walk through familiar streets,
or a quiet conversation.
It is there, when we are not performing, not presenting, and not trying. It becomes part of our physical rhythm of everyday. Over time, it learns our gestures. The way a ring softens at the edges or the way a bracelet settles into the curve of a wrist. No two bodies wear the same piece in the same way.
Jewelry reminds us of things we forget.
A necklace may be worn through a season of change in our lives. Earrings may be chosen for a celebration and a ring that was worn through difficult days.
Sometime we forget these moments, but the jewelry doesn't. This is why we often struggle to part with certain pieces — even when we no longer wear them. They are not only objects. They are memories of treasured moments and sometime difficult times.
We do not usually inherit our taste in jewelry. We discover it as we grow. We choose pieces that feel like recognition. Pieces that feel familiar before we understand why, or pieces that reflect something quiet inside us.
I feel that jewelry allows us to curate our own meaning because it is selected with intimacy. It is held in the hand. Tried against the skin. Felt before it is seen.
It becomes part of how we recognize ourselves.
When jewelry is handmade, the connection extends beyond the wearer. I also feel that the connection is deeper with handmade jewelry than machine made jewelry by far.
There is another human hand in the story. Another set of decisions. Another presence.
Handmade jewelry carries intention, patience, and restraint. It carries the maker’s willingness to slow down, to pay attention, to accept imperfection as part of beauty.
Every mark becomes evidence of the whole process and no two pieces are ever truly identical — just like the people who wear them.
We often think of jewelry as decoration, because we adorn ourselves with our favorite pieces. However, sometimes, I think jewelry can also be a language.
It speaks when we do not, It expresses when words feel unnecessary and It can send a signal without announcing.
Jewelry allows us to carry and show who we are without explanation.
I never imagine my jewelry only in perfect light. I imagine it at kitchen tables, on walking paths or admiring other art in museums.
At dinner with friends, on quiet mornings holding a cup coffee and long afternoons.
I hope it is worn without hesitation. Without waiting for permission. Without being saved.
Jewelry should not live in boxes. It should live in motion. Jewelry does not simply belong to us, It becomes part of us.
And perhaps that is why we love it so deeply — because jewelry is not only something we own.
It is something we carry forward.
Laura
8 items
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Hi Krissi,
Thank you for reading my post, I am glad you liked it. Laura
Hi Greg, Thank you so much for reading my blog. I am glad you found it inspiring. Laura
Hi Christine,
I am so glad you enjoyed the blog post. Some rings can be resized, it depends on the design and stone. This ring cannot be resized, sorry. Laura
This is such a great post. It’s how I feel about my jewelry. Thank you for putting into words the significance of wearing art and how personal the selection of jewelry is to the wearer. I’d love to share this some how, giving you the credit of course. It’s beautifully written. Thanks again. Well done.
Hi Laura,
As a long term “hobby” jeweler and Silversmithing instructor at my local Lapidary Club I read (and re-read) your post titled “Why Jewelry is the most Personal Art we Own” and was so inspired I just wanted to thank you. Because I spend so much time teaching new members this wonderful art form I sometimes find that my own projects drift into the background and, if I’m honest, this is mainly due to lack of enthusiasm on my part but not this week. Your blog inspired me so much that this week I have; finished a repair job that’s been sitting on my bench for over a week, put the final touches on another piece that that will likely be used as a fund raiser for our club, and started working in ernest on a very special project that’s just for me that combines multiple sand cast and other hand fabricated components with very special meaning for me, all thanks to your wonderful and inspiring Blog. If you have the time one day checkout our Lapidary Clubs Facebook page for a look at some of the wonderful work that our members do. https://www.facebook.com/RockhamptonLapidaryClub
Thanks again.
Greg