วันอาทิตย์ที่ 11 มีนาคม พ.ศ. 2555

A Brief History Of Beading

Beading: A Short History

The art of beading has been colse to nearly as long as humans have been. From the occasion an old human found a shell or stone with a natural perforation and strung it on a piece of vine to wear colse to their neck, beading has been beloved in one form or another. Either those objects were worn as a religious symbol, for personal decoration or to permeate them with special powers doesn't matter. Bead stringing is the first form of beading and it persists to today.

Women Fashion Watches

Thousands of years ago, old tribes of humans strung hollow animal bones on a fiber. It is believed that wearing the bones of the animal would Either safe them from that animal or fill them with the animal's spirit, production them a less brittle human. When early humans advanced the tools required to pierce someone else object, creating a hole, then many discrete items were strung for many distinct purposes. Sea shells, seed pods, nut shells, fresh water mollusk shells, and even animal teeth and bones have been found by archeologists with manufactured perforations. Some habitancy made actual beads of clay and others learned to add pigments to color the beads. As humans progressed, they began to enamel the clay beads.

A Brief History Of Beading

#1 Buy Now Kenneth Cole New York Unisex KC1697 Digital Silver Screen Dial Watch


Kenneth Cole New York Unisex KC1697 Digital Silver Screen Dial Watch Feature

  • Dependable Japanese Digital-Quartz movement
  • Quality leather strap
  • Japanese digital movement with day, date and year functions
  • Solid stainless steel round case
  • Water-resistant to 99 feet (30 M)

Kenneth Cole New York Unisex KC1697 Digital Silver Screen Dial Watch Overview

Modern styling and cutting-edge technology, delivered to you by Kenneth Cole New York. Watch crafted from black ballistic nylon and leather strap with round stainless steel case. Logo at bezel. Digital dial features digi-touch technology, world time, day, date, seconds, alarm, stopwatch and chronograph functions. Digital movement. Water resistant to 30 meters

Kenneth Cole New York Unisex KC1697 Digital Silver Screen Dial Watch Specifications

A digital watch with Kenneth Cole flair, the Kenneth Cole New York Unisex Digital Watch boasts a large digital display housed in a round stainless steel case. The digital display features a silver background and is protected by a mineral crystal and provides time, day, and date information at a glance. Other digital features include a world time function that can display the current time in 32 cities (29 time zones), a countdown timer, and an alarm. Additionally, backlighting has been included for afterhours use. Other features include a perforated leather strap that closes with a traditional buckle, Japanese digital movement, and water resistance to 99 feet (30 meters).

Available at Amazon Check Price Now!

Related Products

Customer Reviews




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Mar 11, 2012 08:45:45

About 3000 years ago, the Egyptians learned to make glass and the next logical step was creating glass beads. They elevated the art of beading to a high level that is still admired today for its beauty and elements of design. The Egyptians come to be skilled at adding pigments to the glass to craft very colorful beads. They combined these colored glass beads with high-priced and semi-precious gemstones and high-priced metals, such as gold and silver, to fashion jewelry pieces that were stunning. Beads became a much sought after commodity, so much so that they were used in business and exported throughout the old world.

Other cultures embraced the art of bead making. Most habitancy think of China when they think of an abacus, or counting frame-a calculating gismo that utilizes beads that are slid on wires that have been strung on a wooden frame. The Babylonians were easily the first to use an abacus, although theirs was drawn in dust or sand and small pebbles were used instead of beads. The counter abacus with strings and beads can be credited to the Egyptians, or the old Indian people, possibly. The Chinese played an prominent role in the evolution and development of the abacus.

Romans traded beads all over their empire, and even the old Celts and the Vikings were bead craftsmen who used beads to adorn themselves in the form of necklaces, amulets, and bracelets. old Amerinds used beads as personal ornaments, in religious ceremonies and to decorate clothing articles. Native American bead art is beloved in fashion, today and an prominent source of income for many people. Nearly every person has seen turquoise beaded watch bands, or Native American necklaces and belts.

Beading was-and still is-a part of Native American Society. Many tribes had quilling societies that were sacred to the women. To join the society, a young girl had to be recruited and then she was tutored and determined trained in the bead production arts. The process of production the quillwork was sacred, but the closed piece -- to be worn or used by someone -- was not determined sacred. The goods was of secondary significance to the process of manufacture. The focus was on the thoughts and prayers and the work, not on the closed piece -- very distinct from Western society, which tends to value the closed goods and ignores the process of creation.

There are modern beaders who record that beading is roughly a spiritual experience for them as they embrace the art of creation as much as the closed work, the focus being on perfecting the art rather than a race to complete the final product. Carol Willoughby at The Bead Cottage, [http://www.thebeadcottage.com/], is an example of a someone who appreciates the spiritual side of beading as much as the closed product.

A Brief History Of Beading

See Also : women watches Designer Jewelry Handbags

ไม่มีความคิดเห็น:

แสดงความคิดเห็น