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pider is a chainmail artist currently living in the San Francisco Bay Area. Her
childhood was spent in Mendocino, a secluded community of artists on the California
coast, though eventually she followed her left-brain to Boston to join the
technology revolution, receiving a degree in Mechanical Engineering from
MIT. After several years as a computer geek she discovered that her passion
lay not in technology, but in art and today she spends her time discovering
new and beautiful ways to weave metal.
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ince its inception, metalwork as an artistic medium has captured the
imagination. The development by ancient artisans of techniques such as the
drawplate for forming wire allowed raw metal, naturally heavy and crude, to
be worked into pliable and flowing pieces. The most familiar form of such
"metal weaving" is the chainmail worn by soldiers in the Middle Ages, a
practical application that continued well into 18th century India. However,
the art of "weaving metal" is actually much older. The ancient Greeks,
Egyptians, and Sumerians created highly elaborate and beautiful jewelry using a
technique called loop-in-loop as early as 3000 BC. Today, I extend that
heritage through the jewelry I make.
I was drawn to chainmail because of its incredible feel -- at once both
soft and solid. It lies on the skin with a comforting presence, moving
with you but also seeming to possess an animation of its own.
When I first learned the art of making chainmail, I used large rings and had
notions of making clothing and other sizable pieces. But I quickly discovered
that the more intimate scale of jewelry-making was what really
inspired me. And over the years, I have worked in smaller and smaller
rings, making more and more intricate pieces, striving for the impression of
metal lace. I discovered loop-in-loop jewelry after I had been making
chainmail for a few years and instantly fell in love with its tight, sinuous
feel and incredible visual complexity. The two styles of metalwork
complement each other and afford me a wider range of artistic expression.
I make all of my pieces by hand, just me, one ring at a time. I am a
one-woman business and I take great pride in the quality of my work. My
designs employ a wide range of metals -- stainless steel, silver, niobium,
and gold -- always of the highest grade. I enjoy exploring the
possibilities of "metal weaving," and I am always willing to modify a piece
or custom craft something to your specifications. It is immensely
satisfying to me to know that I've made exactly what you want and that it
fits perfectly.
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