Leftover Toggle Necklace
by Cyndi Lavin Beginner beaded jewelry project. Sometimes when you finish a jewelry project, you end up with a few leftover beads. Even if the colors work well together, you may not have enough to complete another large project. Or maybe the beads are different shapes and sizes. Here is a fun and quick asymmetrical little toggle necklace that's a great way to use up some of those leftover beads. My necklace, Blue Moon, uses lampworked beads I made using palladium foil and dichroic glass on a pretty turquoise Moretti glass base. The large focal bead is about 1/2" long. Also included are four round spacers and two squarish nuggets that were left over from yet another project.
STEP 1. Mounting the focal bead. Note: Because of the large holes in my lampworked focal bead, I also slid a 3mm round bead under the cap to wedge in the large hole to keep the cap stable. Omit this step if the caps don't seem to wobble around. Start 1" from the end of the wire, and grasp the wire with the chain nose pliers just below this point. Bend the wire end at a right angle.
Shift your grip to form the second half of the circle. With the wire circle anchored tightly in the round-nose pliers, tightly wrap the wire end 3 times around the shaft of wire just below the loop. |
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When you put the first right-angle bend in the wire, the pliers will reserve just enough room for the wrapping. Create the second loop, wrap, clip off the excess, and file it smooth.
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For the Blue Moon necklace, I chose a round spacer and a nugget, and framed them with 2 bead caps. The beads are separated by 2 rondelles and a round bead, making this cluster about the same length as the other focal bead with its mounting. |
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Open and add one split ring to the bottom, and another to the top of the large mounted focal bead. Attach your chain to the bar half of the toggle using either a small split ring, a link of the chain, or a small jump ring that you made from your wire. Measure and clip off the length of chain that will go between the toggle and the bottom split ring of the large focal bead, taking into account the size of the split rings. STEP 6. Cut enough chain to make the completed necklace. The central section of Blue Moon turned out to be 7-3/4" long, so I cut 15-1/4" of chain to make my 23" necklace. Slide the ends of the chain onto the split rings.
STEP 7. Making the central pendant. To the split ring, add the pewter charm and 1-1/2" length of chain. Using 3 silver head pins, mount a small spacer or nugget, surrounded by 2 round 3mm beads and 2 rondelles. Bend the top of the head pin into a simple loop (no need to wrap), then clip off the excess wire. Position the largest bead at the very bottom of the chain, and the other 2 spaced out along the length.
Attach the split ring with the pendant and beaded chain to the circular half of the toggle.
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Mazel Tov! Jewelry Treasures is the name of Cyndi Lavin's line of jewelry pieces, for which she uses her own handmade lampworked glass beads, seed beads, gemstones, and vintage materials. Visit her web site at http://www.mazeltovjewelry.com, and contact her via e-mail at cyndi@mazeltovjewelry.com. |
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