In college my jewelry was very geometric and needed to be perfect to look correct. Eventually I found that I didn't want to make things perfect. I kept to geometric shapes, but softer and more natural. Instead of making a perfect square, I would look at a small pebble or river rock that was close to a square, but changed by time and erosion into what it was now. Things didn't need to be perfectly polished or look like they came from a factory for me to find beauty in it. Handmade items will always have small imperfections. Enamel, especially the glass, loves to pick up tiny dark specks of fire scale and have it settle into the molten glass. Gives it much more character in my opinion. The resin charms and pendants are fairly consistent due to the properties of the material. I have to admit I like the ones that don't come out "perfect". "Finding beauty in imperfection".

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