Cedar Necklace - Wood Burned / Lines & Dashes
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. The rock attached is a smooth subtle yellow with a mixture of beige. The beads near the branch are medal gold beads from Malta. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 11/16 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. The rock attached is a smooth subtle yellow with a mixture of beige. The beads near the branch are medal gold beads from Malta. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 11/16 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. The rock attached is a smooth subtle yellow with a mixture of beige. The beads near the branch are medal gold beads from Malta. Minimally wrapped not to take away from the beauty of the mineral. The branch itself measures to be 4 11/16 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.