

This mermaid is riding on waves of pearl, sea glass, shell and vintage seed beads. I had the good fortune of being able to go shopping in the beading district of New York City, and brought home quite a stash of beads. I kept a very tight color pallette when shopping, creams, blues, ambers, and all sorts of wonderful blues. I was determined to create a cohesive line of necklaces, bracelets, earrings etc.
But at the last moment, I wandered into this odd shop, literally with the word curiosities in the title, and saw the mermaid carved in bone. I didn’t know what I was going to do with her, I just knew I had to have her, and her twin sister. I packed up all the beads and squirrled them home to Savannah GA, spread them out and set to work, inspired by the wind, waves, dolpins and beaches of Georgia.
I was a bit daunted by the mermaid bead though, she was a bit pricey for a single bead, she was a large focal piece, and she was a bit difficult to hang in such a way that her own weight didn’t drag her into akward positions. So I put her in a box, a clear plastic one, but a box none the less, and worked on other pieces.
Than one fateful day, I was in Barnes and Noble and purusing various beading magazines when I noticed on one of the back pages an article from the editor of the magazine. She was speaking about how she had just returned from a beading show and had all of these wonderful focal beads. Yet she felt unsure how to incorporate these pieces into her work. She proposed a contest in which you used a focal bead to create a necklace or jewelry piece around. I felt better that I wasn’t alone with my confusion over what to do and went home to face my mermaid.
The fan shells seemed the perfect foil for the mermaid and provided the crest of the waves for her to be riding upon. The sea glass was quickly added and bone, czech glass, shell rondelles and various dangles quickly followed. I still had the problem of what to suspend her from that would complement her yet not take away from the focal design piece. I had scraps of metal wire I had been trimming from other pieces and I began twisting them into shapes, forming links, and hammering them out. The hammering of the metal gave a shimmer as if light reflecting on water, and the stiffness of the metal provided the support for the weight of the piece. It all seemed to come together and I was determined to finish to attempt to enter my first contest.
The deadline was coming right before I had to leave town for 7 weeks to work on the feature film that I am presently on. So I quickly took some pictures and sent them via email to the magazine editor and left town. I brought the piece with me to VA and showed my new line to the friend I was staying with. She immediately picked out the Mermaid and asked if she could purchase it. I told her that I would give it to her as a gift. However, there was the off chance that it might have to be sent off to be photographed etc. because I had entered it into a contest. She said keep it until you know for sure- apparently, she firmly believed her mermaid was sure to make the magazine.
I had forgotten about the contest in the madness of the last few weeks and the contest closed October 15th, so I figured it would be weeks before I heard anything further. And than, just yesterday, I received an email:
“Hi Kristine:
Thank you again for submitting your design to the BeadStyle Art Bead Challenge. We received many wonderful submissions from readers all over the world, and we are happy that our readers were so enthusiastic about this challenge.
Your mermaid necklace has been selected to appear in the Art Bead Challenge gallery in the March 2009 issue of BeadStyle!”
Oh My GOD! I was caught completely off guard. But now, my mermaid, purchased in New York City, worked into the necklace in Georgia, debuted in Virginia, is now being shipped to Waukeisha, WI for her close up.
This is my first contest entrance, and first time selected, first time in a major publication and I only formed my beading buisness this past March. So I think the moral of the story is to do what you do best, be creative, find something you respond to, don’t be afraid to put it out into the world and you never know what might happen.