On Etsy, there is an amazing bead artist whose work I admire. I love her designs and craftsmanship. The beads literally sing in her work. I wanted to share her work with you. Meet the beadedlily. Check out her work at http://www.thebeadedlily.etsy.com/

Here is her amazing description of her work as a beaded jewelry artist."I think just like it takes a special kind of person be a teacher, or a nurse, or to turn trash into fashion, it takes a special kind of person to bead. Yes, some think beading is easy, but I'd say beading well isn't.
Beading well involves many things, including: talent, patience, practice, skill and a sense of style; not only having a style, but knowing, and owning that style. Some of us “beaders” have a style and work within it to great variation and effect. Some of us have a weird sense of style and we never know what we'll wear, but we know what we WON'T wear. That's good enough.
Beading well also takes a bit of respect for your materials, knowing what makes something special, maybe where it comes from, or some of its lore. Beading well includes actively seeking new techniques so that your work is dynamic, developing and moving. Therefore, you, as a person and an artist are growing.
My latest thing is making my own findings. Although more time consuming, it gives so much more control over the finished product.
I love to find beautiful things, glass or stone or metal or whatever--something that someone has had their hands on and loved. I like to combine it with other beautiful things, preferably surprising things, and make it into something someone else will wear and love.
Creating beaded jewelry is like poetry. The pieces together should surprise you, but they should also be so right that you wouldn't have it any other way.
Lastly, those who bead well remember that wearing a piece of jewelry is collaborative. That piece of jewelry becomes part of the wearer—- and part of the artist and designer, and part of the people who shaped the materials and part of the people who first wore those materials or that style.
Wearing and making jewelry is partly speaking to our individuality and partly speaking to our collectivity, our humanity . . . kind of like writing or reading a blog."



