Designing Jewellery

How To Start
Some beginners find a bead loom is the easiest way to begin. Sketch your design on graph paper and select the beads you want to use for the project. Match the colour of beads to the colour you draw on paper.

Think Beading

If you don’t want to buy a lot of beads and tools that will be left over, purchase a bead making kit for just one project.

Many start using patterns online or from magazines. Then after gaining experience making a few items, they experiment with ideas of their own.

Leaf through fashion magazines and learn current trends. Make notes when you see anything appealing, like a model wearing earrings that go well with her sweater. Then work with your pieces to create a variation on the look.

Colour
Choice the colour of your necklace first, and then match earrings or other jewellery around this. Blend colours that are similar - contrasting colour seldom works. Aim for harmony and it will please the eye. However, learn how to use a colour wheel to create effects with stunning combinations too.

Size Of Beads
To help decide on the size of beads to use, liken designing to a flower arrangement – start with the larger flowers first, then fill in with smaller ones. Bearing in mind the design must be functional and practical to wear.

Balance
Balancing jewellery is more an art than a science - however, certain guidelines generally apply:

  • Avoid symmetry & even numbers together.
  • It’s OK and good to use different types of beads in one design – like crystals, pearls and gemstones combined in one piece.
  • Your design should feel good to the eye.
  • All the elements in the design should be in harmony and complement each other.
  • Think of this harmony as yin & yang, large & small, light & dark etc.
  • If you use a focal bead, it must stand out drawing attention.

Findings
Findings are spacers, bead caps, and jump rings creatively. Use these to add style and professionalism to your design.

Start with a Frame
The basic elements of design outlined above are your building blocks. Use them as your starting point from which to alter the design into something from your heart. They’ll ensure your produce powerful jewellery.

Where to find Inspiration
You want to design a new jewellery piece, but how do you get the creativity flowing to come up with a wave of ideas? Creativity stems from within. Your brain stores everything you have seen and experienced - ideas spring from these memories. You already have millions of designs imbedded in your mind. The problem is getting them out! Never underestimate your own creativity.

Think new to create new
Rearrange your mind in every way you can - if you always think along the same lines, you’ll end up with the same ideas.

If you get stuck - paint with a different brush!

Live life more
Build your creativity by collecting ideas all the time. Look at many different designs, online and offline. Talk with customers and other designers. The smallest thing can spark a new idea.

Inspiration comes from many sources apart from jewellery – especially the latest fashions in various forms. Try different experiences and travel more. The more diverse or the further travelled the better.

Analyze why some pieces of jewelry draw your attention, while others look dull. Is it because one element is emphasized over another? Is it a play of color or shape? Does the design resemble something fashionable?

From a basic frame, experiment arranging beads in different ways, using shape, colour and stone to produce striking design. As long as the overall effect has harmony, it will look attractive.

How do I know I have a Good Design?

The successful jewelry design fits into the overall market - yet is distinctive enough to influence browsers to purchase.

A well designed piece moves with the body, feels good to wear, and looks pleasing and harmonious to the eye. A necklace should drape nicely and it must feel right.

The design has to be creative, yet within the boundaries of wear-ability, and it must appeal to the customer or it won't sell.

Inspiration to Design Jewellery

Where to find Inspiration
You want to design a new jewellery piece, but how do you get the creativity flowing to come up with a wave of ideas? Creativity stems from within. Your brain stores everything you have seen and experienced - ideas spring from these memories. You already have millions of designs imbedded in your mind. The problem is getting them out! Never underestimate your own creativity.

Think new to create new
Rearrange your mind in every way you can - if you always think along the same lines, you’ll end up with the same ideas. Live life more

If you get stuck - paint with a different brush!

Think new to create new
Rearrange your mind in every way you can - if you always think along the same lines, you’ll end up with the same ideas. Build your creativity by collecting ideas all the time. Look at many different designs, online and offline. Talk with customers and other designers. The smallest thing can spark a new idea. Inspiration comes from many sources apart from jewellery – especially the latest fashions in various forms. Try different experiences and travel more. The more diverse or the further traveled the better.

Analyze why some pieces of jewellery draw your attention, while others look dull. Is it because one element is emphasized over another? Is it a play of colour or shape? Does the design resemble something fashionable?

From a basic frame, experiment arranging beads in different ways, using shape, colour and stone to produce striking design. As long as the overall effect has harmony, it will look attractive.

Sometimes you’re bursting with ideas and making jewellery faster than t-shirts leave shop windows at the start of cold weather - but other times you get designers block and can’t think further than your last necklace. What you need is lots of inspiration and a little motivation.

Motivation may be a craft fair, jewellery on famous people, or even a big bill you need to raise funds to pay. Artistic inspiration may not be so obvious. You need to get your head outside the box. Walk with a notebook recording your observations. Take a digital camera. What are people wearing? Try these ideas:

  • Study what’s in the window of your local boutiques – the colours, patterns, what draws your attention? Look for new trends or what others make of designs similar to your own. Record everything, don’t trust to memory.
  • Look into the past to see the future. Go to the library and checkout books on the history of jewellery and fashion. Visit museums and old houses, gardens, flea markets and art galleries.
  • Examine detail of nature – patterns and colours of flower petals, leafs, animals, rocks and things on the beach. Take macro photographs. Look up to the stars and down into a microscope.
  • Talk to others about design and styles. Join as many local craft groups as you can and bounce off ideas together. Don’t hide anything - be open and helpful and you will find others will reciprocate.
  • Travel more. Often, the further you go, the more opportunity. Especially in other countries. Explore different cultures – their colours, designs, clothing and architecture. Out-of-the-way places not so far from home can also be inspiring. Areas not polluted by commercialism. On your return, take a large sheet of paper and write numbered headings of your observations from the notes and photos. Elaborate and expand each main point.
  • If the veins running on a leaf look interesting, draw a sketch to remind you of a choker design. Perhaps the colours and pattern on a totem pole draw your attention – this could be a new necklace. Or the side-section of a garden rock reminds you to make an agate bracelet.

    These are just a few of the many ideas you can conjure with a brain storming session. The point is to investigate as much diversity as you can imagine, record it as detailed as you can, and then analyze everything when you get back home. Then when you go to sell your new jewellery, use the source of inspiration to help sell your design!