Basics PDF
Basics PDF
Basics PDF
Purple Prose
Watch for purple words and phrases throughout the book, as they tell you that
there is more to find on that topic. In the paper book, you will find more about
highlighted terms either in the Basics section or in the Table of Contents.
In the eBook, you will find that there are even more colours, and each of them
are clickable, and take you to more photographs, patterns, information, galleries,
or to the artists personal web sites or online shops, or perhaps to a bead store,
magazine article, or indexed reference. We are excited to offer you these worlds
within worlds and will continue to add to the online resources as new work
appears and time permits.
Dont forget your sense of play and adventure as you explore our ideas. Most of
our discoveries were made by happenstance, as we followed some idea down a
winding lane. We are happy to be distracted by sunbeams, stray thoughts and
sounds from over the hill. How else would we evolve? As Roger Von Oech says,
Most people think of success and failure as opposites, but they both are products
of the same process...Its important for the explorer to be willing to be led astray.
Below: Two Tri-Wing Rings by Dustin Wedekind and Kate McKinnon
Opposite: Photo of Gabriella van Diepen (and our oh-so-wearable bangles) by
Kyle Cassidy. These shots were taken in Sabino Canyon, in Kates home town of
Tucson, Arizona, with a crew that included (in addition to Gabri, Kate and Kyle)
Jean Power (our style mistress), Emma Bull (our severely overqualified grip) and
Jeroen Medema (our lightmaster). Bangles on Gabriellas arm by Jean and Gabri.
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Basics
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Basics: Supplies
Getting Started
You dont need much in your toolbox to start beading. Youll want a pack or
two of needles (they bend and break with use and need replacing), beading
thread, something to cut the thread cleanly (we use things like little sharp
scissors and snips) and a few different kinds of beads.
Well tell you our favorite things, but the world is stuffed with choices and
each product has its fans. Admittedly we have strong feelings, but thats only
because we are passionate and nerdly people, incapable of ambivalence.
Thread
For the core crew of this book, the thread of choice is definitely Nymo B or D
from the cone. Its old school, we know, but its what we like. Nymo is a lush,
sturdy nylon Italian upholstery thread, and it comes in a variety of weights
and colours. It has a positive hand, it means business, it feels like silk and
needs no waxing. But this heavenly Nymo of which we speak only rolls off of
the large cones.
The little paper bobbins of Nymo (which are sold in almost every bead store)
are conveniently sized for travel but the thread is uncoated and is really
nothing like the cone thread. If you only know Nymo from a bobbin, you dont
know Nymo. And if you use the bobbins, plan on waxing. Most beaders love
the little containers of microcrystalline or synthetic wax but some are old
school and have actual beeswax.
Other threads used by beaders who contributed to this book are KO, Sono,
One G, CLon, Fireline, Silamide, and Power Pro. Try them all, and see
what suits you. Thread choice is a personal and important element in your
beadwork. Dont even think of letting us tell you what to do.
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Basics: Supplies
Needles
To Knot Or Not
For a variety of reasons having to do with tailoring, lumps and bumps, most
of Team CGB dont knot. Whenever possible, we prefer to weave threads in
(or out) when beginning or ending. Be sure to leave little tails when you weave
in or out, and dont cut them until you are finished working in those sections.
We very much like Valerie Hectors suggestion of using a removable stop bead
on all new threads, not just when you start a new piece.
When weaving in a thread, try to follow the existing thread path as much as
possible to avoid distorting your beadwork in unpredictable and possibly
undesirable ways. As long as you change direction at least twice, the thread
will be securely anchored. If you are using unpierceable thread, you may have
a deeper need to knot. Make your decision based on your materials.
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Work Surface
Some people enjoy beading on synthetic bead mats, because they are foldable,
lightweight and tend to hold the beads in place. They can be used on cookie
sheets, put in stacking trays, or laid out on beach sand. Christina swears by
them. Below, you can see a shot of her setup while she was beading our first
Fortuneteller Bangle. Note the beads neatly sorted into piles, the perfectly
neat work field. (Those of us with messy trays say, Snork!)
Dustin beads from a shallow wooden bowl, like a shaman reading water or
mixing herbs. All of the beads are together, and he fishes the one he wants out
of the bowl with his needle. Marcia DeCoster mixes her beads together as well,
and she says it gives her a better feel for the colourway to let the beads play on
the tray as well as in the piece in progress.
Kate loves to have neat little piles of beads but always ends up with a scatter
of sparkle across her purple velvet board. Teresa Sullivan only likes to work
on white plates with a bit of curve. Sandy Wogaman likes a watercolour tray
(devilled egg servers are good too) to keep her beads separate. Both Kate and
Cath Thomas like to work in stackable trays, which can be quickly moved out
of the way without disturbing the projects in process, or stacked to the rafters
when we find that we are working on twenty things at once. Jean Power can
work anywhere, on anything, and use any thread, but if we were all Jean Power,
the universe would explode, and so the rest of us get by.
For travel, we love the aluminum tins that snap securely together. They come
with synthetic pads, but any sort of custom pad or covered board can be used.
See our online Resources section for where to buy real velvet pads, stacking
trays, and travel tins. Find the synthetic pads at any bead store.
Contemporary Geometric Beadwork by Kate McKinnon
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Basics: Supplies
Right: Each of these
beads is marked 11,
but you can see how
different they are in
shape and girth.
Seed Beads
Seed beads are little glass marvels in a doughnut shape. The ones you see in
bead shops usually hail from the Czech Republic, India, or Japan, and are
found in many sizes. For the work in this book, we used them in sizes 8 and
11 for beadwork and 13 and 15 for edging, embellishing and tailoring.
Japanese seed beads are very even and work well for precision patterns.
Czech and Indian seed beads are made with looser sizing standards and
different equipment, and they vary both in dimension and hole size. We
mix it up, and use Japanese seed beads where consistency is desirable, and
Czech seed beads where texture is more appealing. Czech and Indian seed
beads are often sold by the hank, and Japanese beads are packaged loose.
Cylinder Beads
Cylinder beads are even more miraculous in the world of glassworks. The
cylinder beads used in this book were all made in Japan, and are incredibly
precise and predictable. They have thinner walls than seed beads, which
means larger centre holes and more room for thread passes.
Beading is ancient, but precision cylinder beads are new, only having arrived
in America in the 1980s. Were the first generation of beady humans to have
the opportunity to work with them, and we think about that with happiness
and humility. Its a privilege to have these exquisite materials.
The most common size is 11, although the 10 is gaining in popularity. The
15 can be very fragile, and the holes are much smaller, which make pieces
like Lia Melias (pg. 45) all the more astounding. We used cylinder beads
from Toho (Aikos and Treasures) and Miyuki (Delicas) in the making of this
book. We do tend to avoid the silk-finished cylinder beads, as they are so
fragile.
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Accent Beads
Gemstone daggers and round gemstone balls make appearances in pieces
like the Jalisco Bangle, by Cath Thomas (pg. 214), and glass drop beads
appear on various Rick-Rack Bangles, Wing- and Horn-tips. Youll see glass
triangle beads show up in MRAW Bellybands, and you may see dichroic
Aiko cylinders (look closely in Kates Sea Monster (pg. 99) or Jeannette
Cooks fantastic Triangles (pg. 90).
Youll see rivolis (flattish crystals with no holes) pop up in bezels, as in
Marcia DeCosters Puff Bezel (pg. 63) and in Jeannettes pendant. There
is no bead that we do not love, that we do not contemplate with the eye of
a crow and a seamstress.
Right: An assortment of
larger seed beads, crystals,
fire polished Czech glass,
glass daggers, gemstones,
handmade glass and rivolis
in various sizes. The world
is simply stuffed with
beads! Isnt it wonderful?
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Counting
Geometric beadwork has so many aspects that it
can be hard to be sure we are talking about the same
thing when we say Round 5 or five beads per side.
In the illustration at upper right, you can see the
variety of ways to count to Round 5. When teaching,
we focus on the toothlike appearance of the bead
edges (we call them Toothrows), suggesting that
students count the teeth rather than the spaces.
When decreasing a geometric shape, the most
straightforward way to define size is to count the
working beads remaining per side (i.e., decrease
down to two beads per side, as illustrated, right).
Guide Round
A Guide Round (or Row) refers to a run of beads
woven on top of existing beadwork, providing
either a point from which to add more structure
or embellishment or a place to run a secondary
support structure, such as memory wire (see the
Sea Serpent, pg. 128). This sort of an add is also
sometimes referred to as stitching in the ditch.
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Decrease
decrease
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decrease
Above: Passing
Through a few
beads to get to a
new starting point.
Below: Passing
Back Through to
create a fringe.
Toothrow
You know that it pains us to have Toothrow out of alphabetical order.
But perhaps it helps make the point that a Toothrow can be anywhere.
Anywhere! When we speak of a Toothrow, what we mean is any peyote
or RAW edge; any row or round of beadwork that presents in little teeth,
waiting to hook on to something.
When you add a Guide Round or Row to a piece, what you are really doing
is sticking a Toothrow onto it, a place for new beadwork to land.
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An Increasing Triangle
A Point Round
If you look at the last drawing on the right, above, and think of the Fill
Round as creating little flaps you can pull in, you will see how making tube
or decreasing works. Can you see how the adds make three little blue sides
to fold straight up (for tube) or fold over and in (to mimic the last Increase
Round) and make a Power Puff?
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Row
Round
Step Up
To Step Up in peyote stitch, place your final
bead of the current round, pass through the
first bead from the previous round, and pass
through the first bead placed in the current
round. This bumps you up on top of the
work, and puts you in position to begin the
next round.
Hidden Step Up
A step up can be difficult to see if it falls
where your bead count changes, such as a
decrease (see illustration at right). If you
need to step up in this situation, remember
that if the pair of beads was placed or passed
through in one move, they must be treated as
a single entity for the step up, and you will
need to pass through both beads to finish
the round.
Hidden Step Up
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Sizing
Sizing beadwork is an art. Each bead or type of bead is unique, and the
bead finish drastically affects its girth. Peoples working tension varies
widely; and loose or tight work can mean the difference of an entire size.
Our best advice to you is:
Work snugly. Dont leave any loose thread, or space between beads. Pull
your thread in closely after every stitch, and control your beadwork so that
it isnt loose in your hand. Tighter work is more predictable.
Get a real bangle sizer. What this can measure is not just the beadwork,
but what your hand can wiggle into. You can find them in some bead
shops, or online. See our online resources section for tips on where to find
one, or search the web for metal bracelet sizer or bangle sizer.
Be flexible. If you make a ring that is slightly bigger or smaller than hoped,
you likely have something close to ten fingers, and happily you probably
have friends with fingers too. If you happen to make a Zigged Band (pg.
42) that turns out to be too small for your hand, make it into a knockout
MRAW Flower (pg. 161). Experiment by making maquettes like rings.
Try other beads. If you are locked into a size range, like the number of
Points in a Helix, and you need it half a Point bigger, add in a coated bead.
If its just a snitch too big, perhaps a matte bead would have been just
enough smaller...
Make Removable Bellybands. Especially a Zigged One. Once you nail your
size, you can make as many bangles off of the Band as you want. Make
them in several sizes, and amaze your friends.
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Closures
Youll see a wide variety of closures on the pieces in our book, from none
(bangles or memory wire) to handmade, like those shown in action below.
The most important things to consider when choosing clasps are weight and
points of attachment. Heavy clasps pull down to the bottom of your wrist,
and that may or may not work for your design. Think of your clasp as one
of the elements of (and a reflection on) your work. All points of connection
should be gentle, with smooth metal edges and spacious rings. If you sew to
metal rings, you might connect your work to them with bead-covered loops
large enough to let their rings move freely.
Our favorite clasps are those that work with the beadwork, like hidden snaps,
sewn not into the bead holes but into the network of thread connecting them.
See Deb Bednareks lovely tailoring on her Helix Bracelet (pg. 197) for an
example of a combination of an inner snap and a button and loop.
Beaded toggles are lovely, but must be well-crafted to stand the extra wear.
We love Tiena Habings square toggle bar on her Ocular Chain (pg. 37).
Below, right: Beadwork by Kate McKinnon, clasps by Kate (fine silver, the
Lovely Bone) and Stephanie Price (copper, the Walker Clasp). These clasps are
removable, and slide into slender tubes sewn into the ends of the beadwork.
See our companion eBook for a tutorial on making them, or our web site,
www.ContemporaryGeometricBeadwork.com, for places to purchase them.
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Round 1:
Round 2:
Round 3:
Round 4:
Add 2 beads over the top of the centre bead of the triplets
placed in Round 3, and 1 bead in each side space.
Round 5:
Round 6:
Round 7:
Round 8:
Round 9:
Materials:
soft to moderate
Difficulty:
Although the most visually exciting Squares are probably those made with
block and line patterns, we think that its easier to learn circular beading if
every round is a different colour. This is especially true when the instructions
seem improbable, as in this pattern, which tells you to put three beads on each
corner, and then stack two beads on top of those. It sounds absurd, we know,
but look how easy it is to see when drawn in alternate-colour rounds.
The style and size of bead that you use will drastically affect the look, feel and
behavior of your Squares. Each of these takes only a few minutes to make, so its
a perfect project to explore size and finish combinations. See Francesca Waltons
mixed-bead squares on pg. 33 for inspiration.
Rounds
1-4
5-7
8-9
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Round 1
Join 4 beads into a circle, and pass through the first bead strung
to secure your thread.
Round 2:
Round 3
to end:
Peyote a bead in each gap, and continue to add two beads at each
corner. Repeat until the square is the desired size, and finish with
a Point Round if desired.
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Jean Power
Phyllis Dintenfass
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Phyllis Dintenfass
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Francesca Walton
Francesca uses different bead sizes and shapes in her
patterns and makes several different kinds of squares. The
little spaceships excited us hugely, and we all wanted to
make her Axe of the Warrior Goddess earrings, above.
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A view of the transition from outdoor to indoor space in John Lautners astonishing
Sheats-Goldstein house in Los Angeles. Photo Woolf Haxton, www.thevhf.com
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36
Above: a round of MRAW replaces the Point Round in a Power Puff Rope by
Eileen Montgomery.
Below: Tiena Habings stunning Ocular Chain. Each element begins with a quick
inner band MRAW start, and is finished on the outer edge with another MRAW
Band in a bright colour. Tiena connected her elements and made her toggle bar
with 3-D or Cubic RAW, which uses RAW for the sides, top and the bottom of a
form. Once you start playing with Right Angle Weave, you will find it to be very
architectural, useful for building or beginning almost any shape or form.
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38
Step 1:
Step 2:
Step 3:
Step 4:
Step 5:
Step 6:
Step 2:
Step 3:
Step 4:
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Fig. 1
Round 1
Round 2
begun
Round 2,
continued, first
spacer added.
And were off!
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Round 2
joined
Christina Vandervlist
Triple Crown Rick-Rack
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To make a Zigged Band, begin a regular MRAW Band (see pg. 39) but
instead of a spacer round of single beads, place increases and decreases in
regular increments around the Band.
Our example places them in every seventh spacer-space, and is the pattern
we used to make the Bands and the Rick-Rack on the opposite page.
Please see the Rick-Rack section, pgs. 136-155, and the Fortuneteller Bangle,
pgs. 164-195, for more ways to build on this excellent Zigged Band.
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Round 1, joined.
Yes! This is only
one magical pass
of beadwork!
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