About Me

A Life in Small Things

I'm so glad you're here.

I wanted to share a little of how this all began. This shop, these pieces… they've grown out of years of quiet work, long evenings, and a simple love of making. I never set out to build something big. I just kept going, one piece at a time.

Here's how it started — and what's coming next.


Lydie Anne at age 14
Age 14
Something in My Hands
I was fourteen when I first spent an entire afternoon untangling a handful of old beads from a drawer in my aunt's hallway. I wasn't trying to make anything. I just liked how it felt to thread them, to see the colors line up, to make something small and my own. My mom said I barely looked up for hours. That was the first time.
Lydie Anne at age 20
Age 20
A Quiet Kind of Gift
By the time I was twenty, I was making little earrings and charm bracelets for people around me. Birthdays, breakups, just because. I never saw it as more than a kind gesture. But whenever I spotted someone still wearing one of my pieces weeks later, it stayed with me. That quiet kind of pride — it never really left.
Lydie Anne at age 31
Age 31
A Stranger, a Table, a Shift
When I was thirty-one, a friend asked me to share her market stall one weekend. I almost said no, but I brought a small box of things I had made. Someone I didn't know bought a necklace — just picked it up, smiled, and said she loved it. I packed up that night with a nearly empty box and a feeling I hadn't expected.
Lydie Anne at age 43
Age 43
Work That Felt Real
At forty-three, life was busy — work, kids, noise — but in the evenings, I carved out time to really focus. Better tools, better metals, stones I'd picked carefully. I wasn't just tinkering anymore. I was learning what made something feel lasting. That's when I started to think: maybe this is more than a hobby.
Lydie Anne at age 58
Age 58
A Space of My Own
At fifty-eight, I turned the back of the garage into a studio. It was simple — a workbench, soft lighting, drawers full of tools — but it was mine. That year, I launched my online shop. I started sending pieces to places I'd never been, wrapped with care at the same table I still work at today.
Lydie Anne at age 70
Age 70
A New Rhythm
Now that I'm retiring, everything shifts a little. I still love making jewelry, and I'll keep creating here and there — but life gets more space now. I want time for my grandchildren, for school plays, long walks, slow mornings. The studio door is still open, but these days, I'm just as happy to leave it for a while and be present for everything else I love.

Each piece I make carries a bit of this journey with it — the patience learned at fourteen, the care practiced at twenty, the confidence found at thirty-one. Thank you for being part of this story.

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