I’ve mostly been building a fleet of beaded necklaces in the studio over the span of the month of July. It’s such a joy to work with color. Color makes me feel good. I’ve never been one for neutrals. I am a color maximalist. The pendants and charms I’ve paired with various beads range from horses to wolves to crosses and yucca pods to stars and simple gem settings. Something for everyone (hopefully). I’ll be listing these beautiful Red Dirt Road Necklaces along with the rest of my inventory (an additional 30 necklaces) in my shop on July 29th at 10AM MST. I hope to see you there!

+Of The West+

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2021/07/25/16079/

Glasswing


Where does inspiration come from? It comes on glass wings in the night, flapping and fluttering toward the light.
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This is another post-view instead of a preview. I made these pieces in June and they were all claimed through my online shop and sent to their new homes but I wanted to post some images of them here on my journal because I like a visual record of my work to exist in this space.

There’s not much of a story behind these designs.  I listened to a podcast about cicadas and then researched cicadas online and decided to saw out a sterling cicada wing.  A couple days later I woke up to LITERALLY hundreds of thousands of moths covering my house.  It was an Old Testament plague of moths…nightmarish.  Then I rode one of my horses in the high country and we were fluttered all over by swallowtails as we moved through clouds of wildflowers and sunshine.  It was beautiful.  I found myself really into bug wings for a bit.  This little series is the result. I began by sawing one wing and by the end I had sawed many wings and I turned them all into jewels.

This might be my favorite work to roll out of my studio this summer, so far, but summer is only half over! There was plenty of quiet magic and wisp and lightness to these pieces.

Thank you if you claimed a Glasswing from me in necklace or earring form. I hope they’re carrying you well.

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2021/07/18/16057/

Well heck. I’ve been trying to write a post for five weeks now and just can’t seem to get around to it. I’m just tossing something up this afternoon to get myself back in the habit. It’s going to be lackluster. My apologies! I’ll do better tomorrow.

Here’s a look at some studio work from last week. I can’t believe I managed to get anything finished in that hallowed work space of mine. I had one of those weeks where I simply couldn’t catch a break! I’m sure you know what I mean. I’m not caught up on everything that needs doing around the farm but I’m not spinning my wheels, that’s for sure! I’m managing to get a lot done every single day but the reality is that my to-do list really requires two people and I am only one! What’s a girl to do except keep working hard and trying her heart out?

I have another run of these Saddle Blanket Earrings and Buffalo Robe Earrings almost finished. I’ll refresh the listing in my shop as soon as they’re ready to go. If you missed out on an Alpha Necklace, don’t fret! I hope to make another pack of wolves but I need a break from the design. Hang tight.

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2021/07/18/16036/

Thought Trails

I sit deep in my saddle and relax my hips and legs and give the horse a completely loose rein and we look out together over the soft ridges and verdant valleys to the mountains in the distance and I tell the horse, “I don’t know how to be myself anymore.”

I wish he could offer me some wisdom. He’s a horse. He is exactly himself every moment of every day. He thinks simple things. He is afraid so he runs. He is relaxed so he curls up and rests in the sunshine. He gallops. He shakes the flies from his ears. He bucks. He nibbles and bites and rips his food from the ground and chews it thoroughly. He is busy being a horse. He has no time for anything else. He is who he is. He is free to be himself.

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The edges of the trail are festooned with billowing clumps of butter yellow lupin. The air is honeyed and viscous and humming with bees. I dismount and drop down on all fours, like an animal, to better see this universe of flowers on the forest floor. Stamens and pistils, pollens and fruits.

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Late in the afternoon the horse begins to snatch at tall grass as we move up the trail. He is unsuccessful at snacking, we move at a good clip. It is unlike him to attempt to eat while working. He’s hungry. We pull off into a small meadow, I slip the bit from his mouth and he drops his head and eats. Slowly at first, and then with vigor. I smile as I realize this is the horse version of popping into a gas station — fill the tank, check the oil, clean the windows. I sit down and listen to the horse chew. His teeth on grass are percussive and rhythmic. Ancient music.

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Down in the creek bottom the wind subsides. The path of water is dry, the snowmelt a distant memory. The drainage is filled with a vague longing until a spring pours forth from the ground and we ride alongside the merry trickle and it pools in small reservoirs until the spring becomes a narrow flowing stream flanked by wildflowers, willow, elderberry, nettles, huckleberry, salmonberry — thirsty things, they. The sound of moving water is refreshing after being blasted by the cosmos at the heights of the ridges. I look at the terrain as we ride and imagine where I would make my bed if I were a deer, where I would stand and eat if I were a moose, which branch I would employ as a hunting perch if I were an owl.

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My gaze zooms in and out. I look at the remains of winter on distant peaks, I look at flowers, I look up the bending trail, I look at the aspen leaves upside down and clattering in the wind like a school of fish in the sea. I tune my eyes to movement. I blink at the sun. I wonder if the horse sees what I see and finds it beautiful. Does he like it here? I look at the horse’s ears as they twist and turn and flicker in their sockets, hot with veins and sweating slightly at their base where bridle leather presses into crimson fur. Those ears are always working, sensing and parsing. The horse has stronger senses than I. I depend on the strength of his senses when we ride together. We become a herd of two — two animals, two hearts, two sets of eyes, one mind.