A Hands-On Hobby, Made Wearable

This started as a way to keep my hands busy.

I’ve always liked working with small objects. Sorting, arranging, testing combinations. Beads became an easy entry point. Glass, stone, clay. Materials with texture, weight, and variation. Nothing precious on its own, but interesting together.

I began experimenting without a plan. Laying everything out on the table and seeing what worked. What clashed. What surprised me. Tiger’s eye next to matte clay. Translucent glass breaking up earth tones. Repetition, then interruption. Clean lines with a little irregularity.

The process is slow and tactile. Each piece is assembled by hand, adjusted as I go. I’m not aiming for perfection or symmetry. I like when things feel slightly off in a way that makes them more human. You can see the decisions in the final piece.

These are not trend-driven designs. They’re influenced by materials first, not seasons. I work with beaded elements, glass accents, stones like tiger’s eye, and hand-shaped clay beads. Every necklace or bracelet is built piece by piece, responding to balance, color, and weight.

Over time, this hobby became something more shareable. People noticed. Asked about pieces I was wearing. Wanted versions of their own. That’s when I realized the work didn’t need to stay private.

This is my introduction to that work.

Each piece is one of a kind or made in very small runs. Variations are intentional. No molds. No mass production. Just material, hands, and attention.

This is wearable work.
Made slowly.
Meant to be lived in.

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