The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Telling a story through beading

Students learn centuries-old art form at Washington nonprofit

- By Sandra Diamond Fox

WASHINGTON — Inside the Institute for American Indian Studies on a recent afternoon, an artform was being taught that’s hundreds of years old — beading.

Beading is a technique where glass beads, which come in multiple colors, are woven together on a loom using fine thread.

Items that can be made from beading include bookmarks, hats, medallions, hair pieces, necklaces, shawls and head pieces.

At the workshop, students learned the basics of how to bead. Patterns for items made from the beads were first created on graph paper.

Newtown resident Darlene Kascak, a member of the Schaghtico­ke Tribal Nation, said beading is “a tedious process, going individual­ly through each one of those beads twice,” Kascak said. “You are doing it once when you’re threading it and then you’re doing it again to secure it.”

Originally, beading began with products found in nature, such as porcupine quills.

“The Egyptians created the start of glass beads,” said instructor Susan Schers, of Bethlehem. “The Venetians created the current bead size. Each one of the beads was individual­ly wound on a glass rod.”

According to Kascak, traditiona­lly, the patterns in beading tell a story. The patterns can also convey

where someone lives.

For example, in the plains region — the center of the United States — geometric shapes are used. More locally, beading tends to have floral patterns “because there are a lot more flowers in this region than there are out in the deserts,” Kascak said.

For more informatio­n on beading classes, visit the Institute, 38 Curtis Road, at iaismuseum.org.

 ?? Sandra Diamond Fox / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Beading through the centuries on display at the Institute for American Studies in Washington.
Sandra Diamond Fox / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Beading through the centuries on display at the Institute for American Studies in Washington.
 ?? Sandra Diamond Fox / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? American Indian beadwork
Sandra Diamond Fox / Hearst Connecticu­t Media American Indian beadwork
 ??  ?? Bookmarks made by Susan Schers
Bookmarks made by Susan Schers
 ??  ?? A necklace
A necklace

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