A Tale of Three Pendants
Sunday, July 20, 2014
This is the story of how aesthetics (here in the form of jewelry) can connect people. I’ve never
been a diamond jewelry person. I like stones, but I like a stone that’s been
around, that has had millions of years of water running over it. Diamonds mean
nothing to me. River stones do. So when Bill came back from a trip to
Minneapolis, bringing me a pendant with a tiny perfect silver dragonfly on a
river stone, with the most gorgeous twirly suspension system, I was over the
moon. I’d never seen a pendant I liked better. I wore it all the time,
everywhere.
The first year of the Potholes and Prairie Festival was held
in 2003 in Jamestown, North Dakota, and a woman named Ann Hoffert invited me
and Bill out to speak and lead field trips. It sounded like a cool event. It turned
out to be a dream come true. I remember the weather that year being warm and
sunny and windy, and we both got a whole bunch of life birds, including Baird’s
sparrow, chestnut-collared longspur, and who knows what all else. We fell in
love with the place and the people. Ann and Ernie Hoffert are dear friends now.
North Dakota feels like another home to me. June 2014 was the eleventh Potholes festival I worked. You couldn’t have kept me away with barbed wire and firehoses.
Well, of course, I wore my dragonfly pendant to that 2003
festival, and of course I left it in a drawer where I’d put it for safekeeping
in our hotel room at the Holiday Inn Express, and of course somebody took a
liking to it and when I got home and missed it and called the hotel it was gone,
gone like the moa is gone. Like my favorite ever denim shirt that disappeared
from a hotel room in Wausau…like the fine leather lace up boots I forget where
I left…the really nice stuff doesn’t end up in Lost and Found. So Bill called
the store in Minneapolis and they said they didn’t have any more dragonfly
riverstone necklaces, and they didn’t think the jewelers were making them any
more, but they were kind enough to give him the name of the people who’d made
it. Barbara Samuelson and Russell Strawn Smith, Scattered Light Jewelry, way
down in Denton, Texas.
I thought, well, I won’t bother them, but I mourned that
necklace for a couple of years and finally one day I thought, well, that’s
enough mourning, I’m going to chase down these folks and see if they’ll make me
another.
So I crafted a fan letter to Barbara and Russell asking if I
could buy a replacement. And Barbara answered back that they weren’t making
this pendant any more, but she liked my letter so much that she and her husband
would come out of bug jewelry retirement and make one for me. She thought she
still had a nice river stone….
And they made me one special, and it was even more beautiful
than the first, and I was happy, so happy to have it back. Well, in perusing
their offerings online I saw another of their pendants that I liked just as
much, and it was a bleeding heart with a silver clapper that swings when it
moves against your throat. Oh me. Oh my. I showed it to Bill and wouldn’t you
know on Christmas Eve 2006 he just couldn’t wait and he gave it to me in the
foyer on our way out the door to church, because he knew I’d love to wear it
that night. And oh, I did, and I bawled and bawled at his thoughtfulness. I’m
wearing it AND the dragonfly in this picture but they got cropped off d’oh!!
So here it is. I kind of hate to say it but the bleeding
heart moved up in my Hall of Pendant Fame and it’s been my go-to for eight
years. It’s simply perfect. I can’t tell you how many people have remarked on
it. I always make it a point to wear it to talks. Gardeners and naturalists
recognize the flower instantly and want to know where I got it. I
scribble Scattered Light Jewelry and Barbara and Russell’s names on little scraps
of paper and wonder if the pendant's admirers ever follow up. And hope they
do. Because just a little scrap of silver can make you feel so happy, if it’s
made right and true and perfect as this one is.
Barbara and Russell have been a little hard to find on the
Webs of the Intertubes until just recently, when they opened a physical
storefront both in Bastrop Texas, and one online. They're on Facebook, too, as Lark-Spirited Giving. They call their store Lark,
and their business is Scattered Light Jewelry, and they have all kinds of lovely things, all of which I want in my house right
now. And they have their jewelry for sale there too. They call the plant-inspired pieces Articulated
Botanical Pendants. And boy, are they. They have moving parts and they all fit
together and work just like they do in nature.
So I’ve quietly lusted after Scattered Light’s Chinese
Lantern pendant, knowing it must be something pretty dang wonderful. So imagine
my surprise and tearful delight when Bill surprised me again at Christmas with
Barbara and Russell’s Chinese Lantern. I cannot tell you how wonderful it is.
The silver bracts open up in this swirly spirally naturally overlapping way to reveal this
five-pointed star with a butterfly in the middle, and there are these little
silver balls at the top…I’m sorry. Words fail me. It’s just incredible. I just can't imagine a human making something that works so perfectly as a flower, and out of sterling silver!! Russell can do that. I want to meet him and Barbara soon.
The Chinese lantern is lovely
and weighty and when you wear it it rattles ever so slightly at your throat,
reminding you that it’s there and inviting you to reach up and play with it and
I do, I do, all the time. I find it hard to believe a person designed and created this perfectly functioning thing out of silver. How do you do that?? Mine is not to know, only to wonder.
And to wear and enjoy and love.
Like anything I write about here, from goat cheese to
geraniums, from bougainvilleas to Boston terriers, I write about things because
I love them, not because anybody asked me to. I probably get three press
releases a week from people asking me to write about stuff they want to
publicize, and I say I’m sorry, this is a personal journal, not ad space. It’s
not a book review blog nor is it a product endorsement blog. The only ads on it
are for the stuff I create. I wanted you to know about Lark and Scattered Light, though,
about Barbara and Russell, because they’re so very good and though I still have
never met them face to face I love them. Funny and perfect and wonderful friends. When we do meet we will fall into each other's arms. I'm glad I wrote that fan letter, glad they made me another dragonfly, glad I can wear my friends' art around my neck. It makes me happy to think that some
of you might also one day know the feeling of perfect scraps of silver clanking
ever so gently against your throat.
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8 comments:
Let this be a lesson to every corporation and salesperson out there... this is how you sell (offer) a product or service to others -- with passion, sincerity, and genuine joy, NOT scripts, phoniness, and condescension.
This made my heart sing! Thank you for sharing this. I am blessed with their friendship and they truly ooze love, joy, and talent into the world.
I LOVE their work (and Barbara and Russell) too—incredibly beautiful pieces, and the most wonderful two people. Their work comes from their hearts, as does yours, Ms Julie. Weezy in TX
Beautiful. The whole enchilada of the post is beautiful!
Tbey also have a presence on Etsy if you can't get to their shop in Texas:
https://www.etsy.com/shop/ScatteredLight
Geez, their stuff is just absolutely breathtaking!
I really shouldn't soil this lovely and generous post, but I feel the need to report that ever since a memorable moment in a construction project around here, I've called Bleeding Heart the "Naked Man Going Up A Ladder" flower.
this is so funny to me because I get attached to jewelry (not always for such a good reason) and I get upset when I lose or break it and want desperately to replace it with the same thing!
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