And, my necklace is in the first round of auctions! I had no idea, I thought it would be later.

Beading for a Cure is an annual beading challenge dedicated to raising money for the National Colorectal Cancer Research Association in honor of fellow beader Layne Shilling, who lost her battle with colorectal cancer in November 2002. The premise of the challenge is simple: participants purchase a kit which contains a variety of beads. Each kit is identical. At least one of each bead type must be used in the finished project and the beader can only add one other type of bead to the project (but as many non-bead items as they wish). The finished projects are auctioned on eBay, and all proceeds minus expenses are donated to the NCCRA in Layne’s memory.

The finished length of this necklace, Glass Waves, is 17″, with another two inches available with the sterling chain at the back.  The clasp is also sterling, and the stained glass components are made by Carol Dosse using lead-free solder.  The back pendant showcases lampwork by Laurie B. Smith.  The watery feeling of the beads is complimented by the color of the stained glass, and the silver of the solder and the findings.

This is my sixth year participating, and I have the kit for year number seven. The entire gallery of the 2010 items can be viewed, and check out Beading for a Cure on eBay to see new items up for auction every Sunday afternoon through April. Please check it out and bid!

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I’ve done a little more on this project:

The pendant is stained glass, like my Beading For a Cure necklace, which is going up for auction on eBay tomorrow! I have yet to determine how I am going to attach the pendant to the chain. I may just attach the thread to the anchoring chain, but another possibility is using a stringing medium somehow.

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Attached are the remaining pictures I took at Foot in the Door 4, my previous entry has the overview photos and the photos of my work. These are the pictures I took because I was impressed with the idea, the technique, the colors — or simply because they amused me. Handheld pictures taken with slow speed equals some blur, for that I apologize.

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So this is the view upon reaching the entrance of Minneapolis Institute of the Arts Foot in the Door 4, a show of art by Minnesota residents, all works accepted! This year totaled about 5,000 piece of art, all smaller than 12″x12″x12″.

Inside this first gallery:

Turning to the right, to see into the next gallery:

Which is where my Painted Vessel is displayed:

And here are its neighbors:

The following entry is of other pictures that I took, but there are many other ways to enjoy this exhibit. First, here’s Jean Campbell’s blog post of her visit, including a picture of my vessel. Multimedia works, limited to 80 seconds, are on Vimeo. And the crowning place to visit, MIA has put images of all 5,000 pieces on their website! And for the jewels to top the crown, install Silverlight, and you can see the whole exhibit via Photosynth: Gallery 265 and Gallery 281. This is like running your own webcam through the galleries.

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I’ll be working on a larger project in the near future, so decided to enjoy a smaller project while I’m waiting for those beads to arrive. Here’s the first 2″ or so of a lace leaf chain, from Diane Fitzgerald’s Zulu Inspired Beadwork. I have a pendant I will be adding to this. I’m not following directions exactly — I’m making a straight square stitch base, instead of square stitch over a piece of cording, and it has two tiers of leaves in the instructions. I didn’t have cording on hand, and one tier fits the scale of the pendant.

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