The Archaeologist of Creativity

The beads are old, tiny glass survivors, many more than a century old. Once they swayed from the fringes of electric lamps and evening purses, until fabric surrendered and only the beads remained. 

Lizzie found them everywhere:  forgotten bags on eBay, shredded purses, mysterious little packets filled with mismatched fragments. Her favorites too many- some were broken, chunky, impossibly small. She spent hours sorting them like an archaeologist working in sand.

No one taught Lizzie.

She taught herself, then attended a workshop only to discover she’d already wandered into the forest and found the path.

The foundation? Old blue jeans. Denim strong enough to hold hundreds of beads. Onto that sturdy cloth she stitched thousands of tiny decisions while Charles Dickens read aloud from cassette tapes. Click. Stitch. Chapter. Bead. Repeat.

Was the direction art?

Not exactly.

Meditation, a conversation with color.

A slow ceremony of arranging, dreaming, rearranging, delighting.

How long did each piece take?

The question misses the point.

Time dissolved. Twenty hours? Maybe. The clock was never invited.

After ten years away from beading, what remains is evidence of who Lizzie has always been: someone compelled to gather what others overlook, to layer past with present, to transform fragments into wonder.

My dear friend Lizzie has a need to create, tiny sparks of delight—and stitches them together objects, family, friends, dreams… a way of being.



Comments

One response to “The Archaeologist of Creativity”

  1. Cynthia Thompson

    How lovely and magical!! Blessings

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