Thursday, December 18, 2008
Jewelry Show
Last week my friend, Emily, and I had a holiday show to share my jewelry and her paintings and prints. We transformed the office of my construction job to be the gallery (with lots of help from my friend Marcus) in Berkeley. We had beautiful weather with lots of sun and temperatures warm enough to keep the door open until the early evening.
Lots and lots of folks came out to visit. It was a really fun time, well worth all of the hard work to get it ready.
Thanks to everyone who took the time to come out to our show!
Thursday, September 18, 2008
What's that you say?
Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Education
I've been reviewing my materials from GIA (Gem Institute of America), and am a bit overwhelmed with both how much there is to know, and how much I've learned. Also, how much there will always be left to learn.
Wednesday, July 30, 2008
The Land
I raced home from work after hearing from both my husband and our neighbor that evacuations of some parts of town were beginning. I arrived to a swarm of helicopters dropping water on the fire, and fire trucks stationed throughout town.
The air was thick with smoke, smelling like a campfire. After living in California for so long, I'm finally starting to associate that smell with danger, and not fun.
Nobody had to be evacuated due to the competence of the local firefighters. I'm tremendously grateful for their knowledge and work.
Here's a little jewelry homage to them...
Sunday, July 13, 2008
Summer Travelin'
Monday, May 5, 2008
Tourmaline Mine
Before we got to go into the mine or to hunt for tourmalines in the tailings, Blue treated us to a history of the Stewart Lithia Mine, making sure to include facts about Chinese miners looking for pink tourmaline in the late 1800s.
We didn't get to see any gem-quality pink tourmalines in the mine (the purple is lepidolite, and the pink is tourmaline), but did get to see some of the empty pockets where they'd been found. When tourmalines are found in the mine they get them out of the mine as quick as they can for security reasons. Way too risky to have a treasure exposed to folks who don't understand the concept of not taking what's not theirs.
The tour was wonderful, and I got through without being too scared. Until the end. When we were at our deepest part of the mine tour Blue asked us to turn off our lights and be quiet for a few minutes so we could experience total silence and darkness. At first I thought it was kind of neat...absolutely no light could come in except what we provided by artificial means. My fondness for the situation lasted for about 5 seconds...maybe. Then I started to feel panicky. I'm not sure how long we kept our lights off. Could have been as little as two minutes or as long as four. I came very close to turning my flashlight back on and just having to apologize to everyone. Many, many, many deep breaths later Blue gave the call to light up, and we headed back out to the sunlight.
So glad I did it. Trip of a lifetime.