Trade Bead Necklace TBA31 with Harpoon Head

Here’s a pretty Trade Bead necklace, TBA31, that celebrates the colors red and black, by Janet Walker.  I’ve created this necklace for the “Red and Black” show at the Stonington Gallery in Seattle this April.

 

Photo of Red and Black Trade Bead Necklace with Harpoon Head Pendant

Red and Black Trade Bead Necklace with Harpoon Head Pendant

From the Stonington Gallery posting;

“Red and Black. Color brings vitality and depth to any artwork, and imbues all materials with a fresh vibrancy. This is particularly true of the sacred colors of red and black, a combination that is graphic, bold, and timeless. The deep power of black and the cleansing peace of red make their mark all throughout the artwork of the Northwest Coast, used both in secret ceremony and the most modern design.”

 

The Trade Beads on this necklace are a combination of vintage Venetian fancies; “Spotted Skunks, Black with Red Stringers, and opaque “Reds”. Hudson’s Bay White Hearts are included with black Onyx and Czech’s.  These beads were typical and possibly actually used as payment for fur in the trading going on in the Pacific Northwest in the 1800’s.

The focal point of the necklace is the large Walrus Ivory beads and the exceptionally beautiful prehistoric Walrus Ivory Harpoon Head.

Archival photo of Inuit hunter in Kayak with Harpoon

Inuit hunter in Kayak with Harpoon

This Harpoon Head is at least 2000 – 6000 years old!  It was found washed out of the beach shale at Pt. Hope, Alaska by children who search for these artifacts for their summer money.  The harpoon was one of the most essential pieces of Inuit survival equipment. The harpoon head is attached to the shaft and designed to leave the shaft at the moment of impact into the Seal or animal that is being hunted.  The shaft never leaves the hunters hand and the head is attached to a line and remains in the animal so it can be caught.  This is all done from a kayak or on the ice.  It’s a pretty interesting piece of history all on a necklace.

Necklace designed and strung by Trade Bead artist, Janet Walker.

TBA31…$250.

Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

Photo of Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet Front view

Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet Front view

There is no real reason to call this bracelet by Owen Walker, Diving Eagle, except it is a nicer name than D38.  She could just as well be dancing or swimming or singing, but she is a very nice Eagle.  Right now the eagles are courting, and building nests, dancing on the wind, and singing to each other.  We are seeing forty or fifty every day, I’m sure many of them are the same eagles, but I don’t have tags on them so I just count them anyway!

I am particularly fond of the shape made by the meeting of the two beaks and the border of the bracelet.  It is an interesting shape and quite difficult to get a good crosshatch job done in, but when it is accomplished it just does something to me!  I used to put a long narrow U-form across the top so it was easier to crosshatch, but I never liked it.  I even began to dislike the whole design, until I took that U-form out, now I think it is my favorite eagle design, not big and flashy and it’s eyes are too wide apart to take inlay, but it is has a very pleasing symmetry.

Photo of Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet side view

Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet side view

Hand-carved Sterling Silver Diving Eagle bracelet by Owen Walker, 1.2 inch width. 1 1/8″ width.

price: $450.00

For more eagle bracelets http://walkergoldsmiths.com/blog/small-eagle-hand-carved-sterling-silver-bracelet/  Or http://walkergoldsmiths.com/blog/d1-eagle-brtacelet/

 

Photo of Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet end view

Diving Eagle Hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet end view

Hand carved Sterling Silver Orca Tag

This beautiful Sterling Orca Dog Tag was designed and carved by Adam Mills.  Adam has been hand engraving and learning from Master Engraver Owen Walker at Walker Goldsmiths now for over a year and has come up with a wonderful line of Northwest Totem motif Sterling Silver Dog Tags.

Handcarved Sterling Orca Tag by Adam Mills

Hand carved Sterling Orca Tag by Adam Mills

Orca has always been a very magical creature to me. Growing up on Puget Sound in Washington State  I’ve had many wonderful experiences with Orca.  There was always the mystery and aura of danger that we put on them as children telling scary sea stories around the beach fires at night. We all wanted to know, “Why were they called “Killer Whales”?   Even the wrong name of “Black Fish” that we first called them is ominous sounding. And they are so big!  The male Orca averages 23 feet long and has a huge dorsal fin that sticks up out of the water like some giant shark – very imposing to say the least.

Orcas travel and hunt in pods very like a pack of wolves The Northwest Natives call them sea wolves and to see them hunt in a pack is amazing. As a child I had experiences watching them hunt in Port Susan chasing Pink Salmon (we have always called them Humpies) at low tide up Port Susan and into the shallows of the Stillaquamish River flats. The “Stilly” is famous for its eight spawning fish runs and the Orca love to eat Salmon. The Alpha Female leads the Orca pack with the rest spaced out just like wolves and chases the salmon onto the beach. The feeding frenzy is wild as the Salmon jump in the shallows to get ahead of the Killer Whales, some even jumping up on the sand! The Tulalip Indians that beach seine all along Port Susan love it when that happens as it makes the Salmon so much easier to net.  It’s very exciting to watch and participate in the excitement of the experience as fishermen get their nets out of the way of these big fish and get ready to put them back in the water as quick as possible to reap the harvest. I spent a lot of time doing that as a child. We always watched for the first Orca to come up the sound for the Salmon season. Oh, just writing this is making me really hungry for Salmon! …Janet Walker

Personal engraving can be done on the back for an extra charge. Order yours for $150.00 + Shipping & Handling.

Pulling in the net at Mission Beach

Pulling in the net at Mission Beach

Netting Salmon with a Beach Seine

Netting Salmon with a Beach Seine

Owen Walker Beach Seining with Tulalips at Mission Beach

Beach Seining with Tulalips at Mission Beach

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hand Carved ~ Sterling Silver Orca Dog Tag ~ by Adam Mills
1″ by 2″ with 24″ .8MM Nickel plated Steel bead chain

Unit Price: 150.00
Shipping for US & CA: $5.00

To ship outside the US or Canada, or if you require more information about this item please contact us through the email form at right. We will notify you as soon as your order is shipped.

Thank you!

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    Timberwolf

    Photo of 18 Karat gold hand carved Timberwolf bracelet.

    18 Karat gold hand carved Timberwolf bracelet.

    Walker Goldsmiths calls this lovely little Wolf the Timber Wolf just to differentiate him from the other Wolf bracelets that we do.  Every thing that lives on the North West Coast lives in the timber or in the water, there just isn’t any other place to live.  When I lived in the far north of Alaska I loved to sing with the wolves and to the wolves.  When it gets real cold -40 and lower it gets so quiet you would think you could hear a dropped coin for miles, those are the nights the wolves would sing across the Matanuska and up the Knik valley.  I loved to hike out in the river flats and we would sing back and forth until my voice gave out or they decided I wasn’t that good of a singer and would stop. Go here to read more about wolves and my adventures with them.

    Photo of Sterling silver hand carved Timberwolf bracelet

    Sterling silver hand carved Timberwolf bracelet

     

     

    Hand-carved Sterling Silver Timber Wolf Bracelet by Owen Walker, .75 inch width with Abalone inlaid eyes. 3/4″ width. price: $500.00

     

     

     

    Hummingbirds are Messengers Between the Spirit World and the Physical World

    Photo of Hand carved sterling silver Hummingbird bracelet

    Hand carved sterling silver Hummingbird bracelet

    Hummingbirds are messengers between the spirit world and the physical world. When we see and hear these beautiful little creatures, we can feel joy in our souls and rejoice with them to the pure essence of life. These little masters of flight eat tiny bugs and flower nectar. What a sweet dinner they have. When we see Hummingbird, it reminds us to savor the sweetness in our own lives.

    We had the privilege of watching a hummingbird build a nest and raise three young ones just three feet from our studio window.  Not only did we fell incredibly blessed to have her as part of our family, but we learned a great deal about hummingbirds’ diet and life cycle.  We watched the construction project take shape using spider webs (stronger than steel!) and lichens.  She created a tiny cup with an inside diameter just larger than a quarter, all lined with spider silk, and laid 4 tiny eggs.  All four hatched but one of the little chicks died on the third day, the other three lived.  I loved watching her feed them before they bedded down for the night.  When the sun was low in the sky I could see all the insects in the air outside my window.  She would sit on the electric wire that goes to my house every five seconds or so she would fly down and snatch a mosquito out of the air, after about ten mosquitoes she would go to the feeder and fill up on nectar.  Then she would go to the nest and feed the voracious brood.  Often ten trips would be made before the light faded and it was time for the daily hibernation.

    phpto of Hummingbird feeding her babies just outside my studio window

    Hummingbird feeding her babies just outside my studio window

    The other thing that amazed me is that the young hummers NEVER practiced with their wings.  I have watched hundreds of young eagles and ospreys learn to fly.  They spend countless hours flapping and jumping up and down on the edge of the nest.  The only wing exercise I ever saw the hummingbirds do was to stretch each wing, kind of like when a cat stretches his back legs one at a time.  Then one day while pretending to work (I mean could you work when there are hummingbirds to be watched three feet from your nose?) I saw one of the little guys get up on the side of the nest.  I moved to the window thinking now I get to see them exercise their wings.  Not so!  He just dived off!  Not a single practice flap or anything.  I went into instant panic mode, my cats were outside!  I ran around and collected the cats (with a lot of help) and got them inside the house.  The most amazing thing is that within three hours these three little birds were flying with the adults hovering at the feeder, flying backwards, and doing all those daredevil hummingbird things until we could no longer tell babies from adults!

    This is one of the oldest designs that I still carve, and one of my favorites.  I still get the drawing out and tinker with it trying to make the beak longer etc. but it has remained pretty much the same for many years, but has gone through many incarnations.  This is the one I made for Janet once upon a time.  She wears it almost constantly.

    Photo of 18K Hummingbird bracelet inlaid with abalone shell.

    18K Hummingbird bracelet inlaid with abalone shell.

    Hand-carved Sterling Silver Hummingbird Bracelet by Owen Walker, 1 inch width tapering to .70 inch with Abalone inlaid eyes.

    price: $500.00

    Loon Hand Carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

    photo of Hand carved sterling silver loon bracelet

    Hand carved sterling silver loon bracelet

    Loon is rather rare in North West Coast art which seems a bit strange as there are so many loons living here.  Perhaps it is because they spend so much time underwater.  He appears as a kind of minor walk on character in a few stories, but nothing of a nature to inspire illustration. We felt that since he is a symbol of Canada we should have a loon bracelet in our collection so we came up with this little guy of which we are quite fond! He is one of those designs that is a full profile and goes all the way around your wrist. I like wearing different creatures on my wrist and exploring how I feel when I wear them. I have the greatest affinity for the Raven, then the Orca.  I think when I’m wearing my Loon bracelet I hear them calling to me more often than when I’m wearing Raven or Bear.  This is an experiment in mysticism that I am still exploring!

    Photo of Hand carved sterling silver loon bracelet

    Hand carved sterling silver loon bracelet

     

    Hand carved sterling Loon Bracelet by Owen Walker .75 inch w/o border

     

    $300.00

    Frog: a creature of Transformation

    Photo of Sterling Silver hand carved Frog bracelet with abalone inlaid eyes

    Sterling Silver hand carved Frog bracelet with abalone inlaid eyes

    This Frog Bracelet by Owen Walker is truly a creature of transformation, from egg, to Polliwog, to Frog. Springtime is Frog’s time of power. Change is the only true constant in life and Frog helps this changing through one’s own creative and spiritual resources. Frog is a very powerful spirit helper who brings good fortune to deserving souls. Frog may represent a transferring of spirit power as he is truly a creature of two worlds, air and water.  At one point in my younger days I was separated from my sweetheart for a whole summer while surveying mining claims near Syringa, Idaho with my Dad.  We trudged up and down mountains with amazingly steep slopes and would chance upon small pools on the sides of these mountains where one would think no water could stand.  Each of these pools had its own little population of frogs.  For some reason seeing frogs high up on the sides if steep mountains always cheered me up.

    Photo of Sterling silver and 18Kt gold hand carved Frog bracelet

    Sterling silver and 18Kt gold hand carved Frog bracelet

    I really struggled with this design to make this Frog cheerful as Frogs mouths naturally turn down in what seems to us a frown, but I have always seen frogs as cheerful little creatures that seem always to be bringing good news, or at least hope for better things ahead.  Here in Western Washington we know spring has arrived when the Swans go north and the frogs sing in all the wet places, and as you might imagine there are many many wet places.  The first picture shows this little guy in his standard glory.  The next two show a version of him I did for a show at the Stonington Gallery, with 18Kt yellow gold eyes and spots, I call this one “Watching the girls go by” as you can see the girl frogs in his eyes.

    Photo of Hand carved sterling silver and 18Kt gold bracelet

    Watching the girls go by!

     

    Hand-carved Sterling Silver Frog Bracelet by Owen Walker, 1 inch width with Abalone inlaid eyes.

     

     

     

    D30 price: $500.00

    Raven hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

    Photo of Raven Handcarved Sterling Silver Bracelet

    Raven Hand Carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

    This is understated but easily recognized as a Raven Bracelet in the mid range both in price and complexity of design and the mate to the Eagle Bracelet.  Split from tail to beak so he appears to be two ravens curving around your wrist, his eyes are too far apart to support abalone inlay.  One of my favorite Raven stories is about the Blind Halibut fisherman. We have more stories about Raven than any other character, partly, I’m sure, because Ravens are so intelligent and interesting. (Can you tell I’m a Raven?)  Ravens are also gluttons and very mischievous, so one day Raven saw a blind man go out to fish for halibut, and he thought “He can’t see so I’ll steal his bait!”  Octopus is the favorite food of the halibut and also it seems of Raven, so when the fisherman would set out his hook, Raven would dive down and carefully steal the octopus off of the hook and eat it.  Every fisherman gets frustrated and angry when his bait is stolen multiple times, the blind man was no exception.  He kept his line taut and felt very carefully for the nibble of a bait stealer.  When he felt the tiniest nibble he jerked the line with one mighty pull and hooked the Ravens beak right off his face!  He pulled in his line and there was a strange object hooked on his line that he could not identify.  He felt it all over, but could not figure out what it was, so he took it home and fastened it to the pole out side his house, hoping someone would come by and know what the strange object was.

    Photo of Raven Handcarved Sterling Silver Bracelet side view

    Raven Hand Carved Sterling Silver Bracelet side view

    Next morning the object was gone!  Raven had come by and taken his beak back, but he had a hard time getting it to stay on his face.  The Raven with a broken beak is often seen on poles and looks like a human with wings and an Egyptian style goatee which is really the Raven’s beak hanging down below his chin.  I have never come up with a bracelet design of the broken beaked Raven that I was satisfied with, so I have never done a bracelet to illustrate this story, but it is one of my favorites.

    Photo of Raven Handcarved Sterling Silver Bracelet, other side

    Raven Hand Carved Sterling Silver Bracelet, other side

    Hand Carved Sterling Silver Raven Bracelet by Owen Walker.

    D28 Price $400.00

    Sterling Silver Beaver Tag by Adam Mills

    Busy as a Beaver is a reality. Creative, artistic and determined Beavers are traditionally known for their hard work. Have you ever seen a Beaver lodge? It’s quite an amazing and ingenious construction created by nature’s greatest engineer. The lodge and the dams they build provide safety and protection for the family. One of the primary reasons beavers build dams is to surround their lodge with water for protection from predators like early man and his moat around his castle.

    One story in Northwest American Indian mythology is of the first Beaver who was a woman who loved to swim. Sadly, she had a husband who was not a very good provider and when he returned home empty handed from hunting he would take his frustrations out on her. The legend tells of her staying away from their home for longer and longer periods of time for her own safety when she expected him to come home. Her favorite retreat was to swim in the pond and as time went by she naturally created an environment in the pond for her and her children’s safety and comfort. The legend even tells of her big leather work apron evolving into a very functional tail to enable her to swim faster and build with. This Beaver woman was a wise creature that showed the people how to cut down trees and build with them so they could also be safe and warm in the long wet winters.

     

    Sterling Silver Beaver Tag handcarved by Adam Mills

    Sterling Silver Beaver Tag hand carved by Adam Mills

    Adam Mills has been hand engraving and learning from Master Engraver Owen Walker at Walker Goldsmiths now for over a year and has come up with a wonderful line of Northwest Totem motif  Sterling Silver Dog Tags. The Beaver is the totem symbol of a carver and a builder and Adam’s Beaver Tag would make a wonderful gift for that builder in your life.

    Personal engraving can be done on the back for an extra charge. Order yours for $150.00 + Shipping & Handling.
    Hand Carved ~ Sterling Silver Beaver Dog Tag ~ by Adam Mills
    1″ by 2″ with 24″ .8MM Nickel plated Steel bead chain

    Unit Price: 150.00
    Shipping for US & CA: $5.00

    To ship outside the US or Canada, or if you require more information about this item please contact us through the email form at right. We will notify you as soon as your order is shipped.

    Thank you!

      Your Name (required)

      Your Email (required)

      Subject

      Your Message


      Small Eagle hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

      Photo of Small Eagle hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

      front view of Small Eagle hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

      This is Small Eagle Bracelet by Owen Walker for those Eagle people who don’t want to make a huge statement, but want an easily recognized eagle.  Split from tail to nose so that both sides show an Eagle in profile.  It bothers some people to think that the eagle has been split into two parts so that he can be wrapped around a bracelet.  If you are one of those people then this is two eagles!

      There is so much to say about eagles, they are probably the most mythologized bird on earth.  Every noble attribute is attributed to the family of eagle, and I’m sure some of it at least is true.  Every creature displays noble attributes as they nurture and raise a family, Eagle is no exception.  Many say Eagle is a scavenger and an opportunist.  Yes they will eat what they did not kill as will every predator on the planet, as for being an opportunist, I do not see that as a negative especially when you have a couple of voracious monsters at home in the nest!  When all is said and done Raven has made a reputation out of being an opportunist, so lets give Eagle a little credit for being smart enough to grasp an opportunity!

      I really like this design as it is small enough to be understated, but large enough to make an impact.  There is a lot of carving on it as there are some fairly large areas to be carved out.  It does not lend itself to abalone shell inlay as the eyes of the eagle are too far around the curve of the bracelet to stay in well.

       

      Hand carved sterling silver Small Eagle Bracelet by Owen Walker .75 inch w/o border

       

      D27  Price $400.00

      Photo of Small Eagle hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet

      Small Eagle hand carved Sterling Silver Bracelet