Cedar Necklace - Wood Burned / Red Stone & Wooden Knot
This necklace is part of a series made with branches foraged from the Lush floor of the Olympic Forest. Sawed and sanded by hand, then free-hand wood burned. This necklace is Cedar, and is adjustable in order to be worn high or low. On the left side of the branch sits a small natural knot. The rock attached is a shade of deep red. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 13/16 inches long and a 1/2 inch wide.
These materials were responsibly foraged from the Olympic National Forest in Washington State - colonized land of the Coast Salish Peoples, in particular the Tulalip, Snohomish, Stillaguamish, & Sauk-Suiattle Tribes.
This necklace is part of a series made with branches foraged from the Lush floor of the Olympic Forest. Sawed and sanded by hand, then free-hand wood burned. This necklace is Cedar, and is adjustable in order to be worn high or low. On the left side of the branch sits a small natural knot. The rock attached is a shade of deep red. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 13/16 inches long and a 1/2 inch wide.
These materials were responsibly foraged from the Olympic National Forest in Washington State - colonized land of the Coast Salish Peoples, in particular the Tulalip, Snohomish, Stillaguamish, & Sauk-Suiattle Tribes.
This necklace is part of a series made with branches foraged from the Lush floor of the Olympic Forest. Sawed and sanded by hand, then free-hand wood burned. This necklace is Cedar, and is adjustable in order to be worn high or low. On the left side of the branch sits a small natural knot. The rock attached is a shade of deep red. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 13/16 inches long and a 1/2 inch wide.
These materials were responsibly foraged from the Olympic National Forest in Washington State - colonized land of the Coast Salish Peoples, in particular the Tulalip, Snohomish, Stillaguamish, & Sauk-Suiattle Tribes.