My parents were given a two-inch beaded bell for a wedding present. My dad asked how the bell was made, and the woman who made it gave him a copy of the directions. Dad has since made dozens of bells, and taught me how to make them, too. People frequently ask me how I make them, and the only directions I've ever found online are a little different from what Dad and I do, so...here's how I make them.
They make nice Christmas ornaments, but can be for other occasions too. |
SUPPLIES
38 8 mm faceted beads
74-85 4 mm pearl beads (also called round beads or seed beads)
64 3x6 mm oat beads (also called oval beads, rice beads, or wheat beads)
Optional: small charm for the end of the clapper, if not using a pearl bead
6-7 feet of strong thread (I use nylon hand quilting thread)
Needle--not too thick or it will split the pearl and oat beads in two while you're working
Scissors
Needle-nosed pliers
Glue
This bell is going to have two green and red diamonds in the middle |
Your bell should look like this so far: a circle of faceted beads with alternating pearls and oat-pearl-oat embellishments, with the thread coming out of the pearl in the first oat-pearl-oat section. Pull the thread taut.
Continue this around the circle, ending with pearl bead your thread came through first. For this first round of faceted beads, put your needle and thread back around, going through all six faceted beads and all six pearl beads. Pull the the thread taut--this will help keep the correct tension as you continue.
Now it's time for another oat-pearl-oat section. After putting those three beads on your thread, go through the next pearl bead. Continue around the circle for a total of six oat-pearl-oat sections, anchored on the "old" pearl beads from earlier.
Once again, when you reach the end of the circle, continue through the first oat bead and the first pearl bead.
Give the thread a good tug, working your way around the beads if needed. Keep the thread taut.
Next is another round of six faceted beads. As before, each faceted bead should be flanked by pearl beads from your previous round. Next will be another round in the oat-pearl-oat pattern.
Continue in this pattern until you have four rounds of faceted beads, and five oat-pearl-oat rounds (i.e.; the oat-pearl-oat rounds are between each faceted bead round, and also before the first one and after the last).
This round will be similar the faceted bead rounds, but instead of faceted beads, you'll use pearl beads. Think of these most recent six pearl beads as the B set, with the ones from the oat-pearl-oat around as the A set.
Go around the circle of pearl beads--all twelve--and pull the thread tight. This will close the top of the bell into a small circle.
Be sure your thread is coming out of a pearl from the A set. Thread two oat beads. Find the pearl bead halfway across the circle--it should also be from the A set. Put your needle through it, so that the two oat beads will be bisecting the circle of twelve pearl beads. Continue with the needle through two more pearl beads, once again being sure it's coming out of a pearl from the A set. (Using pearls from the B set in this step will work, but the circle of pearl beads will be distorted.)
Repeat the previous step with the last two oat beads. You should now have a cross made of four oat beads in the middle of your circle of twelve pearl beads, with three pearl beads between each oat bead. Your thread should be coming out of a pearl bead from the A section right next to an oat bead.
Tie several knots around the middle of the cross. I tie at least four--you'll need a decently-size knot of thread in a moment.
Pull the needle and thread down into the middle of the bell. The needle-nosed pliers are useful here--not strictly necessary, but very helpful, especially if your fingers are tired from keeping the thread taut.
Now your thread is hanging in the middle of the bell, coming from the knot in the center of the cross.
Thread ten pearl beads (my dad also uses twelve here). If you've found any pearl beads stuck together, save them for this step. You'll be going back through these pearl beads and a few stuck together makes it a little easier.
Go back through the faceted bead (not that last pearl bead) and the ten (or twelve) pearl beads. This makes the clapper.
Push the needle back through the knot in the middle of the cross--you might want the pliers again for this.
Get the thread as tightly as you can. Pull the thread at that last pearl bead (or a small charm, for example, a heart-shaped one for a wedding gift) on the end of the clapper to be sure the thread in the handle is tight, and then pull the thread where it's coming out at the base of the handle. It might take a few back-and-forths of this to get it really tight.
Once the glue dries, you're done! If the bell is meant to be a Christmas ornament, put an ornament hook or ribbon on the handle for easy hanging.