Formations: Paving the Way for 2025!
I love sculpture. So, it’s natural that sculptural elements enter into my sea glass art. Over the past year, I have leaned into working with highly unusual sea glass formations – pieces that are so interestingly molded by the environment, it’s almost hard to see what they were before. Then, working with these pieces on their own or in conjunction with other oddly shaped pieces, something truly wonderful emerges!
This focus on using the most unusual pieces in my collection applies to both wearable art and my newfound direction of garden steppingstones and sculptures. In the realm of wearable art, I made about half dozen new pieces that look significantly different from the existing collections. In the garden décor realm, I have the opportunity to work with the rarest finds in my collection – bottlenecks. Many were too big or heavy to use in jewelry, but are perfect to form sculptural pieces. Now my sea glass treasure hunt begins anew! This gives me an incentive for digging back into my forgotten pieces to see which ones have been neglected in previous design intervals.
Some of the wearable art pieces that evolved out of this new direction include:
Formations also makes me think of other concepts. Formations of new ideas. Formations of opinions. Formations of a point of view. Evolution into a place that has been formed over time. Re-formation. Formulas. Forming new relationships. All of these forms of formations are what I will look forward to in 2025!
Sculptural pieces are emerging as fabulous formations in their own rite!

Over the last few weeks, I’ve had the opportunity to pull out all the “pink stops!” From a girlfriend’s trip to see “Barbie” to participating in several wonderful “Play for Pink” breast cancer fundraisers – I’ve nearly exhausted my pink wardrobe! When I look out at my garden, I am overwhelmed with the sheer beauty of fuchsia pink gladiolas. So, as I began to prepare for the upcoming Cape Ann Artisans summer mini-tour, I decided to take a pink inventory.


This is the ultimate way to share creativity. If you have a strong creative bent, offer to coach friends, family, and colleagues who want to explore their creative side. Once they choose the path, and start something, stay in touch and offer feedback, examples of others who have done something in their genre, articles that might be of help. Just pointing out to someone, hey, you always coordinate colors so well, did you ever think of putting them together on paper? Your voice is beautiful, have you ever recorded anything? Cooking is a great form of creativity. My 83 year old father has taken to using “

