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Honey Rose Pendant Necklace Handmade from Eucalyptus Wood - Honey Feeling
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Roses inspire Brazil's Claudia Castelao with their lovely appearance, motivating the artisan to craft a sublime eucalyptus wood pendant in a honey hue. After finishing the centerpiece, Claudia sets the flower over a round bone base, using a Zamac loop to join it to the necklace. As a final touch, a comfortable buriti palm fiber cord allows the design to have an adjustable length.
- Ships fast from USA
- Eucalyptus wood, cow horn, Zamac metal, buriti palm fiber
- 0.14 oz
- Necklace: 16.5 inches min L - x 19.8 inches max L x 0.2 inches W
- Pendant(s): 1.5 inches L x 1.2 inches W x 0.6 inches D
THE STORY BEHIND THE PRODUCT

Artisan Organization: Claudia Castelao
Country:
"I was born in São Paulo, but we moved to Mato Grosso do Sul when I was still a child. This is where I grew up and formed my family.
"I'm a professional in educational psychology, but I feel a great passion for art and have always enjoyed handicrafts. I wanted to do something that portrayed our local culture and, on a trip to the flooded lowlands of the Pantanal in 2000, I learned the legend of the flor pantaneira, or flower of the swamp.
"Legend tells how the young daughter of a wealthy farmer and a peasant fell in love and carried on a forbidden romance. After everyone had fallen asleep at night, the young man would knock on the girl's window and give her a flower as proof of his love.
"To allow the courtship, the girl's father said the flower must last fresh while he took a trip. The peasant asked the heavens to show him a lasting flower and he found a blossom with the resistance of wood, the softness of a breeze, and that seemed to have been shaped by the waters. He became lost in the woods but the scent of the flower brought him back and finally the enamored couple was able to be together and happy.
"It was this legend that inspired me to carve flowers from wood. At first, I thought it would be simple — I'd just go to a craft shop and buy a blade to make the flowers. Well, it didn't turn out that way. I soon realized that I would have to find a wood that is soft and that I'd have to develop a way to laminate this wood. With the help of my family, we created a gadget to do this.
"As time went by, I was selling my wood flowers when I realized I had to choose between my two passions — education or handicrafts. In 2003, I opted for crafts as a profession."
Claudia has won awards on three occasions and has exhibited her work at the UN headquarters in New York City, in Expo Milan and in Casa Mostra Brasil at the 2012 London Olympic Games."