Showing posts with label ethical jewellery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ethical jewellery. Show all posts

September 13, 2016

new Wild Acre jewellery and website

It has been a wonderful, happily chaotic, family oriented summer, which means my little space here has been sadly neglected! However, lots has been happening, the website has had a pretty, wee overhaul and there are some new jewellery designs made and still in the pipe-line of my imagination!


I am so excited about this Fairtrade gold ring, a design created earlier this year, it is curvacious, minimalistic and the lines are flowing and organic. It was inspired by the the river at the bottom of the garden and I love everything about its visual simplicity and fluidity. Most of all I love that the gold is mined and sold with utter transparency and fairness, it is part of a social enterprise that is literally changing lives of miners and their families for the better. It would be a beautiful, alternative wedding band for a man or a woman I think?


It is also available in 100% recycled gold and silver. It will in my webshop from next week, but I thought I would give you a heads-up here!

Please do pop over to the website if you haven't been for a while, I hope you love what you find, any feedback most welcome. There are still a few things to add, including a testimonial page, so if you have a piece of Wild Acre jewellery that you love and would be happy to provide a testimonial I would be super grateful if you could email me a few words? Thank you. :)

Meanwhile, if you are in the UK, enjoy this incredible summery weather and have a lovely rest of the week.



January 16, 2016

my mindful year: january


Here we are in mid January and I am only just beginning to feel that I am uncurling from the cosy, reflective days of holiday. I have walked unusually slowly and quietly into this new year, with the notion of rest on my mind. Back in the busy-ness of Christmas eve night, I copied a few words into my journal from The Message (a modern language translation of the Bible), because the notion of 'unforced rhythms of grace' resonated so powerfully with me, as well as the idea of activity and work coming from a rested not anxious place. I knew I had to get pen to paper and record it.  I knew in that moment that this would be a key inspiration for me in 2016.


2015 had been good to me in very many ways but also, if I am honest, quite stressful as well - two kids doing important public exams (including applying for med school which is not for the faint-hearted!), our second son leaving home (he got into med school, hurrah!), hubby searching for a new job and various other issues that were to varying degrees quite difficult to work through. The last few days of the year seemed permeated with this idea of resting, trusting, laying down old fears and worries and walking 'freely and lightly'.  This is far easier to say than to do, or even understand how to do, so I have put in place a few things to make that idea of freedom more real and accessible. I have put aside time at the start of the day to do some stretching, yoga, and prayer - those things really help to start the day from a place of calm for me. 'Yoga with Adrienne' Youtube classes and yoga camp have been fantastic for establishing some kind of routine. I have also signed up for Sas Petherick's #mymindfulyear project - check out her website, I think it is going to be a brilliant way for me to become more intentional and clear sighted and less cluttered mentally. Imagine my surprise and general gobsmacked-ness when her first email proffered the concept of, yup, rest! What her insights have illuminated to me is that our energy on any given day is not infinite, just as breathing requires the in-breath and out-breath, so we need rest as well as activity, pause and imput as well as action and output. So this is the balance I am seeking this year, and there are many wonderful ways of finding it. For me, my faith, my noticing of beauty in simple things, early nights (need to work on that one!), walking and running, my making,  relaxing with a book or sketchpad, journal writing, yoga and quiet moments to myself with a cup of tea or glass of wine, are all ways to slow down and rest, to notice the present moment and how I am actually feeling. To breathe slow and long sometimes. To be properly present. The animal world is always really telling in this respect - think of the focus, power and achievements of a leopard or jaguar in full hunting mode, but also the langourous relaxation of a big cat draped over the branches of a tree - every muscle relaxed and stretched out in repose. We need both, but are so often needlessly afraid of what the need for rest says about us, and consequently glorify being busy. Not me any more, I think the potential to give value to rest is important not just for our own wellbeing, but because it has the potential to help us be far better human beings to those around us and have a clearer sense of what we are supposed to be doing with our lives in ways that can positively impact others, not just ourselves.

One way I have often found to be a short cut to a more restful and present mindset is walking - the more wild the place the better. Step by step, the mind re-calibrates priorities and focus. It is so underrated in western culture, but many indigenous people understood it well, the ability of landscape and our connection and veneration of it to ground our minds as well as exercise our bodies. There has been so much dank greyness this winter but the last few days have had some glorious sunshine and golden afternoons, so I have made the most of savouring each drop of winter sunshine, and noticed the achingly beautiful elements outside that even the short days of january can offer. These times offer so much in terms of mental rest and creative inspiration.



It is impossible for me not to think of new beginnings and fresh possibilities in January, and this has filtered down to my jewellery designs, where the idea of seeds in all their incredible potential for new life and energy alongside their willingness to rest and wait, has seemed just the right thing to be working on in this month. I started this collection a couple of years ago, making gold cowparsley seed pieces, but this month I have been looking at the seeds of my favourite garden plants and have created a new range of single stud earrings based on these lovely, minimalistic shapes. I hope you like the little slivers of silver as much as I do, and I am looking forward for making stone settings with them too. Shapes this simple need real attention to detail, so the shapes and finish have been carefully planned, a gorgeous sparkly brushed finish on the front and high shine on the edges and back for some textural contrast. Take a look here.


Just wondering if you have any fresh ideas as we start this new year, any ways to bring more rest and balance? I'd love to hear. x


October 21, 2015

autumn inspirations

Autumn is such a rich time for inspiration for Wild Acre jewellery. So many of the natural materials that inspire me are in evidence in my garden, the fields, hedgerows and water meadows. Autumn leaves, seeds and seedpods, acorns and pinecones, lichen and late season flowers - so many lovely patterns, shapes and textures. In the garden the very last of the blooms, dahlias, asters, pincushion flowers and anemones still flowering bravely on...




Although today is rainy and grey, we have had some gorgeous sunshine and, as always, I have loved the chance to take to the footpaths and bridleways around my home and watch the trees slowly change colour, the meadowgrasses swell with seed and of course pick basketfuls of blackberries!











Lots of my jewellery is directly influenced by the fruits, leaves and seedpods I see on these walks, things I pick up, pop in my pocket, photograph and sketch. There are little worlds of detail and texture in these small fragments of nature, they are rich pickings for a designer maker! I like the play between the impermanence of the individual items I collect - the way they slowly fall apart, dry out or decay - and the more permanent record of them I make in metal. And yet if I had left them in place, their decay would have brought forth new growth in its season, so the play between transience and intransience is curious and open ended. There is a sense of wabi sabi about these processes of discovery and creation, a sense of wonder in the simplest of materials, the beauty found by looking closely and taking time, the necessity of decay and the pull between of permanence and impermanance.




This autumn there is something about the curving lines of seedpods, and the precious cargo of new life and potential that they contain that is catching my eye and piquing my interest and creativity. These giant cowparsley seeds form part of a range of seed inspired pieces that have been brewing in my imagination for a while.






I am also creating more pieces in my fallen pod range, new stones and new forms.






So this is a busy, happy time at the Wild Acre jewellery bench where I am really going back to the basis of what I love - looking closely at the nature outside my doorstep and finding ways to explore and celebrate what I find in sustainable precious metals. I have updated my webshop recently, if you fancy a gander, click HERE.



April 16, 2014

Blackthorn

The Blackthorn has been in its full glory in the hedgerows and water meadows behind my house for a couple of weeks now, and with the bright blue skies, it is looking so beautiful.


I have blogged about my blackthorn love before, but every year it is such a welcome sight - incongruously delicate blossoms unfurling on the brutish spikey branches - marking the transition from winter to spring for me. I love the unexpected contrasts of delicacy and starkness, winter and spring, darkness against the pale blooms. And without any leaves it almost looks like a flurry of snow has dusted the hedgerows, it is all just such an unexpected combination, and every year I love it all over again!






I have made jewellery incorporating blackthorn leaves, in fact they were one of my earliest designs.


but those delicate, five petalled blooms are really calling my name, especially perched as they are on the spikey twigs...






It will be an interesting challenge to capture that delicacy in metal! But, ohmygoodness, aren't they beautiful?

November 10, 2012

Wild Acre Jewellery Private View

Well, my socks have been well and truly blown off by the wonderful response to my Private View last night. The dark and slightly muddy field by our house quickly filled up with the cars of friends, customers and stockists of Wild Acre, and friends of theirs, who came to have a look at my work.

Along with the display of jewellery, we served champagne cocktails and blinis, there was candlelight and music and MUCH fun! I loved the excited, buzzy atmosphere and I am super grateful to every one who came along and my dear family who helped out in so many ways, for making it such a very special and encouraging evening for me. One to remember.

Sadly my hubby was too busy outside, torch in hand, getting people to and from their cars to take photos during the event but here are some of the set up pictures:












If you might be interested in attending a Private View in the future, please send me your email address and I will add you to my Wild Acre list.

Now for a serious amount of making! xx

September 05, 2012

Inspiration: the coast

We try and spend some time by the sea in the summer, and by September all the lovely images and textures and sounds of the coast begin to feed into my jewellery designs.






 I have never done a 'coastal' range before, but I think I have enough ideas now to formulate one for 2013. I shall be spending lots of time this autumn and winter at my jewellery bench trying to create shapes in precious metal from the wealth of memories in my mind. The haunting marshes of north norfolk, the huge expanses of sand imprinted with the eddies of the retreating tide, the tiny, sea-smoothed pebbles and spiral-shaped, roughly ribbed shells left on the tide line - all these things are filling my mind and I hope will find ways of interpreting their patterns and curves in my jewellery.






So, plenty of material to work towards a coastal - inspired range for 2013, watch this space!