Beads, Inc. is your one stop shop for beaded jewelry supply, tutorials, and inspiration. Sisters Christine White and Anne Todd started making jewelry in middle school and opened their first bead store in high school. Creativity, kindness and crafting are values that have been handed down to them from generations of women in their family. As the sisters built Beads, Inc. over the years, a heavy emphasis was placed on customer service and empowering people with knowledge and skills to make jewelry of their own, giving back and paying things forward. Their belief is that jewelry making and beading is fashion-forward, chic, and simple; so their mission will always be to create a fresh look in the bead world. Constantly growing, reinventing, offering more resources, increasing selection and ways to interact with customers.
Where can you find bigger beads to hide the ends of the strands. I find it very difficult to find the right size beads. The holes are either too large or too small. Anyone know a good place to go? I find I spend way too much time trying to find them.
You demonstrate exactly the way I used the knotter tool, and I thought I was doing it wrong...lol In most tutorials the person put all the beads on first and then pulled all the beads thru each time they knotted. That seemed so cumbersome
It’s too bad we can’t see what you’re doing. Camera is out of range and there are no clear closeups to the technique you’re showing. Really unfortunate, since the finished product is so pretty.
Beautiful and by far the easiest and fastest tassel making tutorial I have ever seen. Thank you so much. I'm going to make a necklace and a pair of earrings today ☺🥰😍
I'm so glad I saw this! Thank you! I had a pair of post earrings that the post had broken off from. I tried using hot glue and of course, that didn't work. I had some jewelry stems, I guess you'd call them, that I super glued and hot glued onto them after your tutorial. I just bent them to make a hook and IT WORKED! They are some of my favorites and I hadn't worn them in years. Thank you for your video. I suppose somewhere down the road I'll have to use some E-6000 but for today this will work.
Thank you for sharing the knowledge. I always want to make one like this. It took me many hours to finish 2 inches long. It looks beautiful and I plan to put either crystal or stone for my first necklace. ❤🙏
Great advice! Appreciated the pep talk portion. I well remember how frustrating just learning to crimp can be (still more crimp beads in my carpets and floorboards than in my actual toolbox, I'm afraid.) Also loved watching you take apart your perfectly lovely necklace. I'd just point out that we can reuse a good portion of old wire as well- if the useable part has become too short for a necklace make it a bracelet, too short for a bracelet, make some earring dangles! I try not to throw anything away while also trying hard not to become a major hoarder. I make mosaics out of broken beads and use recoverable bits of metal to melt down to sand cast pendants and charms. Waste not, want not... well, not quite as much, at least until I step into a place like Beads, Inc! Then I want! Want! WANT! NEED!!! I would go broke working there!
Thank you so much I make flowers but I just realized why I bought the pink shell clovers because I very new to wire and gemstones and crystals and wire wrapping! Lol I could not remember why ! 🤟🏻❤️
Hi! Would love to see how the necklace is started and what to do with the French wire. Absolute beginner with this technique so I need to know about attaching the clasp initially, which seems like it was done prefilming in this vid.