Hidden Details
When designing this pendant I first looked at one of my favourite books as a child, Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book. I was (and probably still am) obsessed with fairies
and pixies and anything mystical, and this book contained it all. What I love
most about this particular book is that the fairies aren’t the stereotypical
ones you usually picture; they are distorted, vulgar and almost a
little bit ugly. But it’s these details that make them beautiful in a different way.
I wanted to combine the look and feel of its rough beauty and sense of hidden, secret details into a pendant that one day could be passed on as an heirloom. I wanted it to be a piece of jewellery that could be something that I passed on to my children one day. It was to be a piece that represented a happy memory from my childhood that would give them, or whoever wore it, the same sense of happiness and bliss that Lady Cottingtons diary gave me as a child.
I wanted to combine the look and feel of its rough beauty and sense of hidden, secret details into a pendant that one day could be passed on as an heirloom. I wanted it to be a piece of jewellery that could be something that I passed on to my children one day. It was to be a piece that represented a happy memory from my childhood that would give them, or whoever wore it, the same sense of happiness and bliss that Lady Cottingtons diary gave me as a child.
This is one of the images from the book and one of my favourite. I used this image to get my general shape for the wing shape of my pendant. Like I stated before, these Fairies are not perfect or pretty in the usual way, but its their imperfections that give them their beauty. |