Showing posts with label DebbyAremDesigns. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DebbyAremDesigns. Show all posts

Jul 5, 2011

Fresh Picks: Seaside Sparkle

Keep your cool on hot summer nights with jewelry in the colors of the sea. Whether you’re feeling feminine, fearless--or both--these original designs complement any summer wardrobe. And since these pieces are all artisan crafted with vintage components, they’re one-of-a-kind, just like you!



Turquoise Flower Garden Neck...
$22.95

VINTAGE BEAD EARRINGS Tahiti...
$34.00

STATEMENT RING Vintage Sapph...
$22.00

Summer Breeze Necklace - Re...
$22.00

Recycled Vintage Turquoise a...
$48.00

Recycled CIRCUIT BOARD Steam...
$48.50

Treasury tool by whalesharkwebsites

Feb 28, 2011

Member Spotlight: Forever in Style

Vintage beads used in exciting new designs—what’s not to love? We recently talked with Debby Arem of Forever in Style about her Etsy shop.







Fall honey bead necklace

Q. How did you come up with the name for your shop?

In the late 1970s, I first began designing jewelry—all hand knotted beaded necklaces and earrings—for museum shops and catalogs and upscale boutiques and department stores. I made both conservative pieces and funky and ethnic ones and created a company known as “Beadles”—cute name when I first came up with it, but tiresome when far too many people would say, “Oh so you’re a big fan of the Beatles?” When I was searching for a name for my Etsy shop, I thought of how many of my designs had originally been created years ago (I guess even my designs would be considered “vintage”) but were still in style. Friends would remark that my designs would be in style forever because of the unusual vintage design components I have at my fingertips (purchased years ago from buying trips my husband and I made all over the world). Many people still recognize my work as “Beadles” and I’ve actually had people find me on Etsy and send a convo such as” I think I bought one of your pieces years ago,” but it was time for a new name that personified what I felt my designs reflected.







Turkish blooms earrings

Q. Aside from your business and related activities, what do you do for fun?

My husband and I are both avid animal lovers and are active in a couple of dog rescue groups—one for all breeds of dogs and one specifically for Samoyeds. I do home visits, vet checks, and a lot of networking to help find forever homes for pets that have been given up or abandoned. I’m amazed at some of the inane reasons we’ve heard for why a pet was given up, such as the Great Dane owner who “didn’t realize he’d get so big.” Don’t get me started or you’ll never get me off my soapbox!


Joel does a lot of the photography for the dogs on one of the websites and was instrumental in getting our 501(c)3 (nonprofit status) for that rescue. We’ve both done adoption shows and transport on occasion as well. I also LOVE to garden (although it’s an uphill battle with the deer, squirrels, and mother nature who took it upon herself to hurl a tornado our way a couple of summers ago and demolish a number of my plants). I also knit and love to cook.






Qufu garden bracelet


Q. What does your family (or friends) think about your online vintage business? Are there any common misconceptions you run across, and how do you deal with them?

My family and friends are pretty intrigued by how I run an online business and all the ins and outs of promoting myself, especially since I’ve never considered myself very computer savvy (I can see my grown kids grinning here as I type this). I recently revamped my blog and use Twitter and FaceBook to get my name out there. And of course I belong to this awesome team and try to participate as much as I can!







Ocean treasure earrings

Years ago when I first started my jewelry business (yes, I’m a vintage dinosaur who has been creating jewelry since the late 1970s), it was all done by first making appointments to see buyers and curators at museum shops and then dragging along a big heavy shoulder bag of my work. And of course I did some cold calling where I “pounded the pavement,” which I absolutely HATED. When the Internet came along and I could run my business from home, life became so much nicer and so much more productive! Of course (and here’s where the misconceptions arise), I find that even my friends sometimes think that since I “work from home,” I don’t really have a job. I do this full time—7 days a week and far too many hours a day—for this to not be a job, but I LOVE every aspect of it. I just have to remind my friends of this every once in a while!

Feb 15, 2011

Before and After: From Vintage to Handmade


In these days of repurposing and recycling vintage objects, the beauty of the newly created art is just an extension of the marvelous items that went into it. Vintage jewelry, buttons, books, furniture, china, and knick-knacks—marvelous in their own right—can take on a new, rich beauty when combined creatively.


Which is better? That’s like asking whether you like peaches or peach pie—both can be absolutely delicious. Just for fun, here are a few examples of Before and After.







Pot metal dress clips from GeneralWhimsy2 and Wedding hair pin from OhFaro



Sep 13, 2010

Vintage Buzz: Old Things With A New Purpose






This RECYCLED Circuit Board Geekery Jewelry Lanyard Eyeglass Holder
from Debby Arem Designs is just one of many creative goods
on Etsy with a green attitude!
While it's a new concept to most of the world, "Vintage is the new 'green'" is old news to the world of broken-jewelry-hoarding, hand-me-down wearing, old-knicker-peddling vintage-ites. What is new is the ways folks use vintage and cast-off items.

For years we have seen primitive crafters build dolls and spoolies from vintage wooden spools, tole painters decorate everything from rolling pins to bread boxes, and Grandpa fix holes in the barn siding with old tobacco tins, but have you ever seen what can become of spent circuit boards, unemployed window shade pulls or sparkly earrings long-parted from their mates?







Window Shade Pull Necklace from Cigar Box Beads combines
gorgeous semi-precious stones with vintage celluloid
window shade pulls to create a modern fashion statement.

Here is a selection of such items made by members of the Etsy Vintage Team, found while searching etsyvintageteam recycle, etsyvintageteam repurpose and etsyvintageteam upcycle.

If you're looking to apply your own twist to the Vintage Green Revolution, search etsyvintageteam supplies to find a joyful plethora of vintage crafting and sewing supplies, from paper ephemera and salvaged fabrics to old embroidery patterns, medicine bottles and typewriters.





Vintage Supplies like this treasure trove of Vintage Fabric Scraps