Archive for October, 2010

The many names of prayer beads: rudraksha beads, malas and more

Monday, October 18th, 2010

What are beads for?  That’s a simple question that we may not consciously think of very often.  I personally prefer my beads to be more beautiful than useful :)   But one way they’ve been consistently used over the centuries is as prayer beads.

You may know about rosaries, but here are a couple more kinds of prayer beads you might want to be familiar with:

Rudraksha beads Rudraksha beads — this is a natural-material bead, made from the seed inside the fruit of a tree in India.  Rings & Things sells both small and large rudrakshas.  We’re told that traditionally, people talk about “how many faces” or segments these beads have.  Some say the number of faces relates to the particular spiritual powers the rudraksha has; numbers from 1 to 108 have been reported.  Interestingly, there are 108 rudraksha beads on a mala, which leads us to…

Malas are prayer necklaces, used very much like rosaries to help a person keep track of prayers being said.  (This is mostly in the Buddhist and Hindu traditions.)  Malas are made with any of several varieties of beads, including rudrakshas.  Another mala bead that I’ve been really impressed by are Sandalwood mala beads sandalwood beads, as fragrant as the wood they’re made from.  Rosewood mala beads Rosewood mala beads are pretty too, with a rich dark red luster.

…and the great thing is, they make wonderful jewelry of all kinds, for everyone.

47.654415,-117.40637

Wednesday, October 13th, 2010

Just for fun…

Rings and Things visible from space

What’s “47.654415,-117.40637” ?

Here’s a clue…you can see it from space :)

Leave a comment if you figured out what’s so interesting about this!

Beads can prolong your life!

Monday, October 11th, 2010

Well…not actually…but we learned the coolest thing the other day:

You can pick beads that extend the life of coated stringing cables (like BeadalonBeadalon, Soft Touch, TigerTail and Soft FlexSoft Flex).  How’s that?

  • Certain beads help the beading wire’s coating to “wear” more slowly.
  • Other beads can wear the coating off faster, sometimes within a couple of weeks of making jewelry – even when the beads themselves look smooth and aren’t too heavy.

Stringing cable

Of course, we all know to use the heaviest possible cable (thickest and as many strands as possible) for our projects, and not string too tightly. Why?  Using thin stringing cable and stringing it tightly can weaken and cut into the cable.

But what we just learned from an industry source is that sometimes a smooth-looking bead has chemical residue that can eat away at the coating!

The three types of beads mentioned to us as often being rough on stringing cable were these:

  1. vermeil (the worst with chemical residue)
  2. Bali beads (also responsible for cutting the cord with sharp edges)
  3. brass beads (like certain trade beads)

These are still all great beads, of course!  But the takeaway is that you can choose the best possible combination of stringing material and beads when you make jewelry.

You learn something every day!

With this knowledge, you can plan for maximum long life in your jewelry…

Eyelets, grommets, rivets, decorivets and…aglets?!

Monday, October 4th, 2010

One of my coworkers passed along some information that clears up a fine distinction:

An eyelet, strictly speaking, is a single-piece metal ring, reinforcing a hole in material like fabric or paper.  You’ll often find these in office-supply stores…

A grommet is bigger than an eyelet, and is two pieces (a base and a washer).  It’s another way of reinforcing a hole in material with metal: the grommet base goes through a hole, the washer is placed over it and the two are affixed to each other.  A specialized kind of grommet is the Bead cores / grommets bead core, used to make a silver lining in your bead, giving a Pandora beadsPandora-style” effect.

RivetsRivets look like eyelets from the back, but their tops are solid, with no hole, and are rounded.  Prior to use, a rivet is a smooth cylindrical shaft; one end has a head on it.

A Decorivetsdecorivet is a jewelry finding made by Vintaj.  It’s a decorative metal object (butterfly, compass, blue-jeans style rivet, etc.) with a pointed rivet shaft that can be pressed through or folded around other surfaces.

:) And some off-subject trivia: the (usually plastic) tip at the end of a shoelace (or bolo cord) is an aglet.