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She Grows Her Own "Gems" To Make Artisan Jewelry
“I try to make my pieces so your eye is drawn to the seed,” says Debra Groat, who grows her own “gems” for the jewelry she makes. Her jewels are colorful heirloom dried beans and corn kernels accented by metal, glass and stone jewelry parts.
    With a passion for jewelry since she was 5, Groat recognized an opportunity in 2000 when she shelled heirloom beans that her brother had grown.
    “I couldn’t get over how gorgeous they were, and that they had a history behind them. I thought if I could make them into jewelry it would be a wonderful way to show them off,” she recalls. She had been dabbling in making jewelry for a couple of years and started experimenting with the seeds.
    Thirteen years later, she has a rainbow of 63 varieties of beans and several varieties of corn in jars in what appears to be a well-stocked pantry. In fact, they are on shelves with other jewelry parts in a roomy work studio over her home’s garage.
    Just getting the seeds in the jars, requires a lot of time and labor, Groat says. After going through the work of planting and growing them, she handpicks the beans and corn and spends many hours in the winter shelling bushel baskets of dried beans.
    She packages them and freezes them for a minimum of three weeks to kill eggs or insects on the seeds. Then they are thawed and stored in jars for another 5 to 6 mos. to dry. After that, Groat drills a small hole through the center, and then lets them dry for another month. It’s a technique she developed after much experimentation to ensure the seeds don’t crack, flake or shrink later.
    When fully dried she handpicks the “gems” to create earrings, bracelets and necklaces. Among her customers’ favorites are the Cherokee Trails of Tears bean necklace with black onyx and antique gold tones and a Hopi Blue corn drop necklace.
    “Most of my customers are gardeners, people interested in organics and heirloom seed or people who care about the environment,” Groat says. In addition to the natural beauty of the pieces, they also appreciate the short history she includes. Brockton, Christmas Lima, Jacob’s Cattle, Painted Lady Scarlet runner, Magpie and Red Calypso are just a few of the heirloom beans that Groat uses.
    Keep them dry, and store them in a sealed container and they will last the same as other jewelry, she says.
    Groat sells her pieces at events and art shows and through her website, named after her business name, Saverine Creek Heirlooms. Pieces are photographed on the website and range from $24 to $135.
    Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Debra Groat, Saverine Creek Heirlooms, 3352 Klender Rd., Rhodes, Mich. 48652 (ph 989 879-1026; www.saverinecreek.com).


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2013 - Volume #37, Issue #4