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Goodness, what a whirlwind six weeks this has been! We have been in our beloved Maine since the end of September, and it has been a blur of packing and unpacking and packing, head colds and anime, anxious cats and revisiting our favorite parts of the state.
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Everything is still in a state of flux here, but I was able to carve of a small space for my metalsmithing tools and gemstone cabinet. I thought perhaps I would take a few months to rest, to gestate, to build up potential energy for a big special collection I have only just barely been able to keep secret.
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Yet here I find myself, with a tiny flock of ravens scritching at the windows anxious to be let out into the world. I was unable to keep my hands away from sharp, unforgiving metal, the smooth, cool surfaces of gemstones, a sketchbook blooming with ideas despite the frequent frosts we’ve already had here.
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And so, the ravens. The moment the trees lost their leaves and I began to see the silhouettes of the crows perched in the birch stand near the house, I threw myself into the studio and coaxed the ravens out of metal and stone. I make them every year, and I knew I just couldn’t leave them tucked away until next year. My autumn would not be complete without a studio full of noisy, rustling, clacking ravens.
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They have all been claimed (within thirty minutes of their release in the shop!) and now I am carefully wrapping them in paper, tucking them in cozy cardboard and cotton boxes, and tossing them off into the gray afternoon so they may wing their way to their intendeds.
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And now, I find myself already working on my annual Redux offering.
Redux is a special collection I do in November where I select a few pieces from the previous year’s work and remake them for those who either missed out or would like a special holiday gift. This year, I will be making a few bowl fulls of Honey Necklaces and Apiary Rings. Since I won’t be making any Honeybee pieces in the coming year (2020) I thought it only right that they be the focus of this year’s Redux.
What better way to spend a late autumn than with the glow of citrine?