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Advance your skills at the torch with me!

October 17th, 2011

I will be teaching in the United States for the first time in more than ten years!

From now through March I will be offering personalized instruction in lamp-work beadmaking in my own Bisbee studio. Experience what formerly you had to travel to England or France to learn.

Classes may be arranged for a single day up to a full week exploring the gamut of lampwork bead making through wirework jewelry making and the business of being successful.

These classes, while open to anyone, are primarily focused on the intermediate bead maker. Instruction will include:

•    Extensive time at the torch working from flat stained glass remnants as well as glass rods
•    Pulling stringers for the work to be done
•    Gold Stone stringers
•    Fine helix stringers
•    Star cane
•    Blowing shards
•    Hollow beads
•    Mixing colors with shards for landscapes
•    Working with dental picks
•    Bottles
•    Working with cane chips
•    Casing gold with clear shards
•    Cutting the glass

Register early as once these sessions are full there will be no more. I am planning a trip to Indonesia to research a book in the Spring and this opportunity will likely not arise again. Pricing begins at only $150 per day to learn from this master glass artist. For detailed information please contact me directly via email me via beads@theriver.com.

Information on accommodations in historic Bisbee, AZ can be found here.

View my one-of-a-kind creations that are presently available at www.etsy.com/shop/KateDW.

Up and Running!

August 25th, 2011

The little kiosk is turning out to be a great success… it may be because it is so close to an ice cream store.. I dunno, but we are having fun and than is important don’t you think?

OK so here is my Kiosk.booth

The Etsy store is a happy place too.. I had not imagined how far afield my work would go out of there.. Australia, Canada… This is the wonderful result of working so hard to build it up. Things are quiet in Arizona in the Summer, so if my work is already attracting attention, things can only get better as the Fall and Winter seasons approach.

At this time of year, I begin browsing my favorite magazines to find the latest trends in fashion colors for the upcoming season, so that I am ready to match them for you in my lamp work bead making and jewelry design. This change in my life is proving to be a good one.

New Projects, New Future!

July 26th, 2011

You know, I have never been very good at blogging.. can you tell from the date on the last time  wrote here?

That’s because I have been overwhelmed in keeping my own Gallery, “Uptown Tribal” Well, things are cnanging and I am working realy hard at building my Etsy Shop.

I am closing the gallery after nearly eight years and trusting my work to Internet sales because I notice that as a result of increasing gas prices and other factors, people are learning to enjoy shopping on line. So many of you already know how my jewelry feels in the hand and have visited me over the years, so I hope you will enjoy having more ready access to my work when you are not able to get to Bisbee… after all, it is a bit of a long ride across the desert, and beautiful as it is, that is a bit of a jaunt! (Don’t get me wrong though.. it is always fun to come here and we have all kinds of new galleries opening up, and of course there is always lots of good music too..!)

Oh.. I am going to keep my original little kiosk (remember that??) in the Convention Center by the Ice Cream Shop (!) so you will be able to find my work there too…I felt that simply closing the gallery and disappearing seemed too sudden…
I am going to start offering a few Intermediate and Advanced classes in Lamp Work…Please contact me if you are interested… they will not be frequent and I will only teach three pupils at each three day session. I have not taught glass work in the United States for over ten years… I always taught in England and sometimes France, in the Summers only….so this is another change.

So…please visit my online store at  KateDW.Etsy.com  and if you have time, I would love to hear from you and get your reactions or criticisms! We are all in this together…Peace.. Kate.Uptown Tribal Gallery

More Pictures of Uptown Tribal…in Memory!

March 3rd, 2011

gallerysideviewgallery front

August 1st, 2008

I took this picture of neon tubing flowing  at Plowden and Thompson while teaching there a few years ago. The process is fascinating, P+T is one of the only genuine neon tubing manufacturers in the world.

P T2

I stay every year with the owners, Barbara and Richard Beadman at their home… a special treat.
In 1907, before I taught my first class we had to import 5 Minor Bench Burners from Canada and set up the work room. There was no kiln and so Richard took specifics from me, a totally unscientific me, and in a few days there it was…handmade, lined with fire bricks, but functioning, even though at the time it had the simplest heat timer.

In 1997, there were only four bead makers I knew of, and two of them had been taught by me at home in Arizona.. that year I taught 25 more, in groups of 5. The following year we had a week intensive at Plowden and Thompson for 40 people with other teachers participating, including Diana East, who had studied with me in Arizona and was now a teacher too. Actually, several of my first pupils are now teachers in the UK, and glass bead making has taken off. Now there are at least 200, I’m told and more each year.

Four years ago I was invited to teach at The Old Kennels, in Devonshire, ( www.theoldkennels.co.uk/) by Tracy Bell. Wonderful art center, check it out… they teach all kinds of rare and wonderful traditional English arts… and Tracy breeds Alpacca so I thought you would enjoy a picture of them rather than looking at one of my classes!

alpacca

Staying there for a few days, teaching both glass bead making, and wire work, was so special because I went to boarding school nearby when I was ten years old and everything brings back memories.

I teach the making of beads with stained glass remnants at the Old Kennels and I know this is the first time these methods have been taught in the United Kingdom.

Well, I must move on.

Well, as you can see from the link on my web site, I now have a store in Etsy. It took me a while to decide join this lovely Internet showcase, and now I will do my best to keep a constant flow of fresh work accumulating in it. This means inventing a 48 hr day instead of 24!

tools 1

CLASSES IN WIRE WORK AND BEAD JEWELRY DESIGN AT MY BARN/STUDIO IN BISBEE ARIZONA.

The other news is that I have had lots of work done on my lovely large barn/studio and am ready to give classes there.

Various reasons. I want to pass on my knowledge. Time marches on and I have so much to teach.

I am interested mainly in helping those of you who are already in the bead jewelry and/or lamp work bead business and are perhaps in need of some guidance. I want those of you who are working hard and wonder why things are not going quite the way you planned. There is so much to know. We are going into a pretty worrying time now and are having to adapt in many ways.

People are going to do their shopping on the Internet more frequently now as travel becomes more expensive. I think it is wise to sell there, but I want you to know that my gallery is still going strong and that is because many people still love to be able to touch and choose their treasures from boutiques and galleries.

Silver has rocketed in price, so we need to adapt there too. No worries, there are ways of designing bead jewelry that work with copper and silver mixes for instance. I see that PMC is bringing out a new copper product. I love it, though I don’t teach it. Jewelry has always been fascinating to us and we will prosper if we bend with the changes.

Here’s the Egyptian Clasp.. you can learn to do this too, if you like!

egyptclsp

In my jewelry making class we will see how to design elegant pieces giving respect to how the new, the old and even ancient glass beads were made and how to bring them into contemporary, wearable pieces.

green annularear

CLASSES IN LAMP WORK GLASS BEAD MAKING, INTERMEDIATE .

treecl

My lamp work classes will be limited to four pupils at a time. I do not believe in teaching larger classes because obviously I can give each pupil really special attention if the class is really small.

I will be offering classes in making beads with stained glass remnants. I have been promoting this work for nearly fifteen years and I think you will be fascinated with the mixing of colors I have developed. Working with this glass will lead you to new ideas when you return to the rods. I can teach both, but prefer to give classes in one or other glass at a time.

In my studio also have lots of Plowden and Thompson and Lausha glass in case you want to give them a try.

If you are interested in this class, I would like you to send me pictures of your beads so that I can see if you would benefit from it…I don’t teach beginners any more, but you don’t have to be very advanced to qualify, so don’t be afraid!
Please feel free to email me with any questions you might have about the classes. I will have a list of open dates available within the next few days.

more museum

January 24th, 2007

long viewI’ts hard to show you how it really was, this is just one little view.. it was wonderful.

French Expo participants

January 24th, 2007

beads namesWhere to start.. Well, I’ve been back for quite a while from another divine adventure in France during July and August last year with glass bead making friends Nadine Piskadlo and Frederic Marey. Just after I arrived in early July, it was time for the exhibition I have dreamed about for ten years or so. It came to be in a beautiful Museum in Berck Sur Mer. It’s really silly for me to be finally telling you about this exhibition now, a few days before it closes, when it opened on July 16th last summer on a beautiful sunny day.
The museum invited any glass bead artists anywhere to submit a piece on Sun Wind and Sea. The chosen beads for this show will stay in a permanent collection there because it is a Maritime Museum and how perfect is that! Read the rest of this entry »

Study Corner in the Gallery

September 26th, 2006

Gallery wendi 1
This corner is provided in my gallery for people who want to watch my instructional films but perhaps cannot afford to buy them. There is a little VCR and a bench just out of the frame. Wendi Maloy, pictured here too, persuaded me to open the gallery five years ago, and she designed the interior and stayed to see the gallery thrive. Wendi then returned to New Orleans to sell in a friend’s gallery in the French Quarter called Beadazzled, where she had originally worked for five years. When Katrina hit, she was there and had some pretty traumatizing experiences, including losing her little daughter Lili for a while. She returned to Bisbee and has been my friend and manager ever since.

View of my gallery

September 26th, 2006

Now that I have learned to blog my pictures, watch out! Thought you might like to see a view of my gallery in Bisbee. Everything in it is made by me including the pictures on the walls, which are pen and inks of the old Sausalito waterfront in the late 1970s. There is a lot of jewelry made with my beads but also pearls, African Trade beads, glass, and a little line called Bisbee Chain. So here is one  view…my gallery1

News from France

June 13th, 2006

Yes, I’m back in Le Treport, Normandy, staying with Nadine Piskadlo and Fred Marey right by the sea. They have a house on the front, and down the road about 5 minutes walk is Nadine’s bead shop, Entree En Matiere.
Up through the town, through old arches and narrow streets, one comes to a road that ends again in the sea, but is overlooked by incredibly high white cliffs. Read the rest of this entry »