My family used to accompany me bead shopping, but finally gave up when they discovered that there is o such thing as a "quick trip to the bead store" for me, except under extreme circumstances; one time, I even won a $10 bet with my husband that I could get in and out of the store in 10 minutes, but the truth was, I really did only need one item, it was a slow time, and I was hungry, so I wanted to get to the restaurant.
Otherwise, it's not difficult for me to spend hours Bead Shopping, whether on line, shuffling through a Gem Faire, or standing in a bead store. I love glass, and I love color, and I love the endless variety of those two elements in beads.
I recall reading an article somewhere about the brain's inability to perceive more than about 150 of the different colors and shades of Delica beads on the market, and that after the basic "core" of beads has been purchased, everything else is a waste, since the brain "sees" each of the additional colors in the same way it would one of the core colors. Once we've obtained those basic core colors, everything else is just lagniappe. Unfortunately, I have never seen an actual list of those core colors. I wish I could, as I would love to experiment with that theory a bit.
Beader Sandra Wallace, in her gorgeous treat of a book, The Beader's Color Directory teaches that it's not the bead, it's how, where, and when it's used in a grouping of colors that makes it work. This is one of those books I recommend for all beaders, as the color combinations she demonstrates are but a gateway to creating your own colorways, using a variety and palette of colors and shade you might otherwise have never considered.
Margie Deebs, in her book A Beader's Guide to Color teaches us how to let color sing. Well, that's not what she says, but it's how I've always interpreted her beading and color theory teaching style/ I sense the same feel for color and placement in her lessons that I do when breaking down a piece of music into the individual instruments; hearing only the bass line, or the drumming, a thread of flute or a wide line of he horn section. I am also able to see and "feel" the use of color as Margo teaches it, much the same as I see the separate and integration of color in hand woven textiles. Observed up close without looking at the finished piece as a whole, a single strand of color may look out of place, random, or possible in error. But when the full article is viewed as a whole, or from a distance, the colors come together and integrate the work. That seemingly random color becomes the "tie that binds" the whole of the weaving, or the beadwork, together.
What are your thoughts and feelings on bead colors and the variety available? Do you think there are simply too many of them, that there are too many shades, variations, treatments to make it worthwhile to own more than a few basics? Or do you celebrate every new bead that is introduced, and hate to see any color leave the lineup?
Do you find that you work with a core of colors, or are you all over the map, depending on the beadwork?
Let us hear from you. I'm sure I'm not the only beader to question her choices on different colors, and wonders if it's just acquisitiveness that makes me collect, even though I do use them, or if there's a reason. Are these shades reaching out to parts of my art-brain, or am I just expressing bead greed?
Let's hear your thoughts. Comments below, please!



