Jewelry & the method of making
Jewelry and the method of making jewelry which includes the steps of cutting a piece of material from an existing article of clothing, most preferably a pair of denim pants, attaching a fastener to said piece of material, and adapting said fastener to be capable of removably attaching said jewelry to a portion of a person's body.
Priority is claimed to Provisional Application No. 61/239,661 filed on Sep. 3, 2009.
DESCRIPTION1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to jewelry and the method of making jewelry using pieces of existing articles of clothing, and fasteners capable of removably attaching said pieces of existing articles of clothing to a portion of a person's body.
2. Background of the Invention
For thousands of years jewelry has been formed and fashioned in many ways and styles. Many different types of materials have been used. Usually, jewelry has been formed from different types of metals that require hours of forging and forming, and master hand craftsmanship. It became evident over time that forming jewelry from pre-existing materials and shapes would save enormous amounts of time, energy, material, and money.
In the past 100 years or so the art of manufacturing clothing has been mechanized, and in following, a large percentage of clothing is simply thrown away when its usefulness has been determined to have run out. With this in mind, it became evident that all this wasted material could be used to create other new and useful pieces of clothing and unique styles of jewelry. Further, it became evident that using portions of these pre-used or pre-existing articles of clothing would save time, energy, material, and money.
After further analyses and experimentation it became evident that certain portions or parts of a pair of pants were optimal to form certain types of jewelry. For example, belt loops for earrings, waist bands for wrist cuffs, and hem lines for chokers. Even further, certain types of materials seemed to perform better than others. For example, denim is strong and easily pierced for attaching other elements, such as connector and attachment members. In following, it became evident that pre-used pairs of denim pants are very useful within the method of making jewelry as set forth herein.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe instant invention relates to jewelry and the method of making jewelry. The method of making jewelry includes the steps of cutting a piece of material from an existing article of clothing, attaching a fastener to said piece of material, and adapting said fastener to be capable of removably attaching said jewelry to a portion of a person's body. As will be disclosed within the preferred embodiment, portions of a pair of pre-existing denim pants are used to form different types of jewelry members. In particular, belt loops can be used to form earrings, waist bands to form wrist cuffs, and hem lines to form chokers.
The preferred embodiment of the inventive jewelry and method of making as set forth herein is best shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The foundation material can be formed by a number of different members or portions of a pair of denim pants, including the belt loops, the waistband, the hem, or the pockets. Many types of decorative members can be used and attached thereto, such as beads, jewels, buttons, snaps, studs, clasps, tags, or findings to create the accessory. Finally, many types of attachment members can be used, including clips, hooks, posts, wire, and chains to hold the earrings to an ear of a person.
As shown in
Jewelry formed as chokers or cuffs may use a snap, a button, pieces of VELCRO, a toggle, a hook, or a chain to connect the two ends together for it to stay secured to a person's body. Barrettes can use a metal clip, a comb, or even a bobby pin as a base to attach the accessory thereto. Pendants and key chains may have a loop or a hole to put a hanging object such as a chain therethrough. Pendants may also have pins on the backs to attach them to clothing. Cuffs may use buttons, snaps, pieces of VELCRO, or ties, to keep the cuff on a person's wrist. Pocket add-on accessories may use snaps, buttons, or pins to attach over an existing pocket.
Belt loops are an excellent option to form the foundation material used for making earrings, hair ties, barrettes, combs, key chains, pendants, and pins. Its function is to act as a strong and an easily perforated base for attaching other fashionable elements and an attachment member, such as a clip, hook, post, wire, or chain to hold the jewelry to a portion of a person's body.
As shown in
Waistbands or hems are another option as a foundation material for chokers, cuffs, headbands, pocket designs, key chains, pendants, pins. Cuffs can be taken from existing cuffs of shirts or blouses and can also acts as a foundation piece of material.
Any and all other obvious modifications to one or more of the parts of this invention are inherently incorporated herein.
Claims
1. An article of jewelry comprising a body member and a releasable attachment member;
- said body member formed from a portion of an existing article of clothing; said
- attachment member being removably attached to a portion of said body member, and
- adapted to be removably attached to a portion of a person's body.
2. The article of jewelry of claim 1, wherein said existing article of clothing is chosen from a group of existing articles of clothing including a pair of pants.
3. The article of jewelry of claim 2, wherein said pair of pants is formed from a material chosen from a group of materials including denim.
4. The article of jewelry of claim 2, wherein said portion of existing article of clothing includes at least one portion of said pair of pants chosen from a group of portions of said pair of pants including a zipper member, a waist band member, a belt loop member, a hem line member, a cuff member, a pocket member, a button member, a tag member, a rivet member.
5. The article of jewelry of claim 1, wherein said attachment member is chosen from a group of attachment members including hooks, posts, wires, toggles, buttons, snaps, pins, screws, elastic members, combs, barrettes, plastic strips, and spring bands.
7. A method of making jewelry comprising the steps of
- a. cutting a piece of material from an existing article of clothing;
- b. attaching a fastener to said piece of material;
- c. adapting said fastener to be capable of removably attaching said jewelry to a portion of a person's body.
8. The method of making jewelry of claim 7, wherein said existing article of clothing is chosen from a group of existing articles of clothing including a pair of pants.
9. The method of making jewelry of claim 8, wherein said pair of pants is formed from a material chosen from a group of materials including denim.
10. The method of making jewelry of claim 8, wherein said portion of existing article of clothing includes at least one portion of said pair of pants chosen from a group of portions of said pair of pants including a zipper member, a waist band member, a belt loop member, a hem line member, a cuff member, a pocket member, a button member, a tag member, a rivet member.
11. The method of making jewelry of claim 7, wherein said attachment member is chosen from a group of attachment members including hooks, posts, wires, toggles, buttons, snaps, pins, screws, elastic members, combs, barrettes, plastic strips, and spring bands.
Type: Application
Filed: Jan 6, 2010
Publication Date: Mar 3, 2011
Inventor: Aphrodite R. Backhaus (Hampton, NH)
Application Number: 12/655,689
International Classification: A44C 13/00 (20060101); A41D 27/08 (20060101); A44C 27/00 (20060101); A44C 25/00 (20060101);