Showing posts with label firefly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label firefly. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 30, 2015

Fireflies - the AJE Themed Challenge Reveal

Example of amazing photography from Firefly Experience. 


I saw my first fireflies Sunday night while doing a 3 mile run around the neighborhood. It's been unseasonably cold and rainy this year, chasing us indoors. How appropriate just a couple days later we have the June reveal for the AJE firefly/lightning bug theme design challenge, which is open to jewelry designers AND bead/component makers.

Take a look at how this month's theme inspired our participants:

Guest Designers:
Melissa Trudinger - https://beadrecipes.wordpress.com/
Mary Detray - http://www.brassrabbitstudio.com/blog

Keren Panthaki - https://vasdea.wordpress.com
Tammy Adams - http://www.paisleylizard.com/
Veralynne Malone - www.veradesigns.blogspot.com
Terri Del Signore - http://artisticaos.blogspot.com/
Heather Powers - http://www.humblebeads.blogspot.com
Susan Delphine Delaney - https://susandolphindelaney.wordpress.com


Wednesday, June 24, 2015

Fireflies in Mythology: The June Theme Challenge

Artist: Shiokawa Bunrin Title: River Landscape with Fireflies
From Wikimedia Commons: Artist: Shiokawa Bunrin Title: River Landscape with Fireflies 


Have you been working on your bead and/or jewelry designs for this month's theme challenge of fireflies/lightning bugs? The reveal is happening June 30th! If you want to participate and be added to the link list, you must email me at jennifer.glassaddictions (at) gmail.com by June 27th. Further details about the challenge can be found at this link to the original post.

firefly lightning bug
Firefly/Lightning Bug image found here: http://managementscience.biz/lightning-bugs/


While Jenny Davies-Reazor is our resident mythology expert, I did some light internet research and found a few myths and legends about fireflies that span the globe.

Some of the examples of myths are from a page on About.com:

In China, it was believed fireflies were the result of burning grasses.

In Japan, there is a legend that fireflies are the souls of the dead. Variations of the legend state they are the spirits of warriors who fell in battle.


"There’s a Apache legend in which the trickster Fox tries to steal fire from the firefly village. To accomplish this, he fools them and manages to set his own tail on fire with a piece of burning bark. As he escapes the firefly village, he gives the bark to Hawk, who flies off, scattering embers around the world, which is how fire came to the Apache people. As punishment for his deception, the fireflies told Fox that he would never be able to use fire himself."


Victorians had a superstition that finding a firefly in your home meant someone was going to die.

Kerr Number:  K8007 fireflies on vase
Kerr Number:  K8007
Comments:  These insects have been classified as fireflys. This vase was not excavated at Tikal. It was confiscated from a looter. EG = Xultun, Chan Weel K'inich


Another website, Mythinglinks, has an abundance of writings, both fiction and nonfiction, about fireflies. You could probably spend several days reading the rich source of material. One example is a  a summary of Luis Lopes's work "Some Notes on Fireflies." (this is a link to a PDF and includes images of fireflies in art):

"The firefly is associated with cigars in Meso-American sacred scenes. The author points out that seeing a lit cigar on a dark night does indeed resemble a firefly's light -- and in ancient art, especially ceremics, the firefly often holds a cigar either in its mouth or hands. (Lest that image suggest a Groucho Marx comedy routine, it should be remembered that tobacco is considered highly sacred by many indigenous peoples and is used as an offering to the gods.) In the Popol Vuh, the hero twins trapped in the Dark House of the Underworld are each given a cigar and ordered to keep it lit and yet intact all night. The twins succeed by attaching fireflies to the ends of each cigar, which keeps them lit and yet still intact at dawn.

In the Maya period, the firefly was a "common metaphor for stars and cigar smoking." The "queen of the stars" is a firefly; other fireflies carry "lights from the stars." Elsewhere, "firefly" is the ritual term used for a cigar or smoking tube. Comets and meteors, called "smoke stars" in several Mayan languages, are also compared with cigars, which is to say, with the firefly. In a darker vein, several vases show fireflies witnessing and probably providing light for "grim nocturnal scenes" such as the "sacrifice of the Baby Jaguar."

fireflies lightning bugs
From Digital Photo Blog, a photograph of fireflies using a long exposure

We hope you'll join us in this challenge! It's super easy to participate. 

1. Goal - Have fun! Try something different! Be inspired by the magic of fireflies! Make something that fits within this theme. This can be an artist bead, a component, or a finished piece of jewelry.    

       *You are free to use any artist bead/component in your design -
  • from an AJE team member 
  • of your own creation
  • from another artisan bead maker... 

2. Share/Reveal - Reveal date June 30th
If you would like to be included in the blog reveal at month's end, please email Jen at jennifer.glassaddictions (at) gmail.com. Since this is open to all, this is the most efficient way to be included. Emails need to be received by June 27th  to be included. 


Wednesday, June 10, 2015

The Magic of Fireflies: the June Theme Challenge

Firefly/Lightning Bug image found here: http://managementscience.biz/lightning-bugs/

As you may recall, the theme for the June AJE theme challenge is fireflies/lightning bugs and is open to all component makers and jewelry designers. I thought it might be fun to learn a little bit more about fireflies. Especially because I knew absolutely nothing about them except how beautiful they're flashing lights are.

It turns out, what we are witnessing is a call to mate. Males fly around flashing their lights hoping to impress a female. The females stay on a perch on the ground or on a shrub. If they are impressed by what they see, they flash back. If they aren't, they don't flash and the male can't find them in the dark.

Example of amazing photography from Firefly Experience. 

According to the Boston's Museum of Science Firefly Watch website, The female decides which male to mate with based on the nuptial gift she receives. The nuptial gift "contains sperm to fertilize her eggs and food to help nourish them. Research on some species, including a local Photinus, suggests that the female is swayed by the brightness and duration of a male's flash. The more robust male firefly can produce a brighter flash and offer a larger nuptial gift, thus making him the preferred choice."

To most of us, the flash of fireflies look the same as every other. However, there are lots of variations. From the same Firefly Watch website:

Each species of firefly has a fairly distinctive flash pattern, which each differ in a number of ways:
-Color
-Length
-Number of flashes
-Interval of time between flashes
-Time of night they are active
-Flight pattern
Flashes can vary for a number of reasons, including temperature, time of night, time of year.

Image found on Backyards for Nature
If you are interested, you can volunteer to watch for fireflies in your backyard to help scientists with their research. For more info, visit the getting involved link, and if it sounds like something you would like to do, there's a link at the bottom to sign up. 

The AJE team have been working on their theme pieces a little bit here and there. I showed a few components last time, but we have a couple new pieces to share.

First up is Lesley's stunning firefly pendant: 

firefly pendant lightning bugs lesley watt art jewelry elements blog

And Caroline tried out some prototypes in glass that are just magical:

firefly lightning bugs lampwork glass beads caroline dewison art jewelry elements blog

We hope you'll join us in this challenge! It's super easy to participate. 

1. Goal - Have fun! Try something different! Be inspired by the magic of fireflies! Make something that fits within this theme. This can be an artist bead, a component, or a finished piece of jewelry.    

       *You are free to use any artist bead/component in your design -
  • from an AJE team member 
  • of your own creation
  • from another artisan bead maker... 

2. Share/Reveal - Reveal date June 30th
If you would like to be included in the blog reveal at month's end, please email Jen at jennifer.glassaddictions (at) gmail.com. Since this is open to all, this is the most efficient way to be included. Emails need to be received by June 27th  to be included. 

Friday, May 29, 2015

AJE COM Theme: Fireflies

The 2nd AJE Theme Challenge 

firefly lightning bug on leaf
Firefly/Lightning Bug image found here: http://managementscience.biz/lightning-bugs/
You, our loyal readers, know us. You know that we are constantly evolving, creating, discussing and challenging ourselves. This year the team decided to initiate four themed challenges, loosely aligned with the seasons. We wanted to offer a creative challenge that was broader in scope, drawing in bead makers, component makers, as well as designers/jewelry makers.

The Theme for Summer 2015 is Fireflies/Lightning Bugs


While many people in the United States believe the unofficial start to summer is Memorial Day weekend, I personally know it's summer when I look out my window at dusk and see the first fireflies flashing their lights in my back yard. There's something so magical about the points of light pulsating in the twilight that draws me outside, even with the risk of being eaten alive by the non-magical mosquitos.

Fireflies, which we mostly refer to as lightning bugs here in Indiana, are actually a type of beetle and not really all that interesting in daylight. I certainly wouldn't have selected it as a theme challenge based on their daytime appearance:

firefly lightning bug on leaf during the day
Image found on Backyards for Nature
However, at night....

fireflies lightning bugs at night
From Digital Photo Blog, a photograph of fireflies using a long exposure
When I informed the team that I had selected fireflies as the theme for June, I was stunned to learn several had never seen a firefly before! I had no idea they were that regional. I just assumed wherever bugs can live, fireflies are there. Nope. The UK contingent of the team informed me they had never seen them. And the U.S. west coast apparently doesn't get them either.

Later in the month, I will share some mythology and science involved with the lightning bugs to help keep you motivated to create components and/or art jewelry based on the theme. 

Here's what the AJE team has been up to:


Caroline Dewison fireflies in the forest
Caroline Dewison these porcelain pendants of fireflies in the forest. She says they're an idea in progress, but they look pretty amazing already. 

Jenny Davies-Reazor fireflies lightning bugs idea in progress
Jenny Davies-Reazor's works in progress. They will be "all about the color...luminous blue sky at dusk and silhouette foliage."

Niky Sayers firefly lightning bug in progress copper
Niky Sayer's firefly idea in progress. 

Linda Landig firefly sketch
Linda Landig made a quick sketch of what she plans to create with this month's firefly theme. 



Jen Cameron firefly lightning bug lampwork bead
Jen Cameron's (me!) first prototyes of fireflies in lampwork beads

How to Participate in This Month's Theme Challenge


1. Giveaway - This theme challenge DOES include a giveaway! ( This will vary each time.) 
I will be giving away two of the above pictured lampwork focals - winners selected randomly from comments on this post. 
  • Winners selected Monday June 1.
  • You must have an active blog. 
  • Email and blog address must be included in comments

2. Goal - Have fun! Try something different! Be inspired by the magic of fireflies! Make something that fits within this theme. This can be an artist bead, a component, or a finished piece of jewelry.    

       *You are free to use any artist bead/component in your design -
  • from an AJE team member 
  • of your own creation
  • from another artisan bead maker... 

3. Share/Reveal - Reveal date June 30th
If you would like to be included in the blog reveal at month's end, please email Jen at jennifer.glassaddictions (at) gmail.com. Since this is open to all, this is the most efficient way to be included. Emails need to be received by June 27th  to be included. 

Jen Cameron bio