i love handmade things

i love handmade things My name is Sarah Drew and I make statement jewellery using recycled materials in Cornwall I'm a designer living in Cornwall. www.sarahdrew.com

I make headdresses and jewellery using recycled materials such as antique brooches, sea-glass, sea-plastic and driftwood.I love handmade things, craft fairs, cafes and cream teas!

*World Ocean Day* today: I made This is not Food necklace for our  TIDES exhibition at  in 2022 I think.It's so upsettin...
08/06/2026

*World Ocean Day* today: I made This is not Food necklace for our TIDES exhibition at in 2022 I think.

It's so upsetting seeing what the plastic pollution we allow to be in our seas does to marine animals: I crocheted this necklace from ghostnet to replicate the stomach contents of a dead dolphin. The heavy verdigris copper chain signifies the history of human fishing, like harbour boat chains.

I do feel hopeful seeing how our local beaches are much cleaner now, larfely thanks to volunteer clean ups. And this week 3 teenagers in India were given the Earth Prize for inventing an affirdable way of getting microplastics out of the water.

Hope is resistance eh? Think we just can't stop 🀩

Really excited planning for  our SHIFT exhibition at  with my sister-in-law  in August 🀩I've been enjoying making new sc...
07/06/2026

Really excited planning for our SHIFT exhibition at with my sister-in-law in August 🀩

I've been enjoying making new sculptures, wall panels and art jewellery pieces for it: work that honours the experience of bringing up my sons, remembering what it was like but also recognising the shift in purpose and role, to being a mother and a person now that they've grown up.

Amy paints big, bold still lifes, abstracts and landscapes drawing on her experience bringing up her kids (cousins with my lads) along the coast in Devon and holidays in the South of France.

I'll also be launching my Motherhood poetry zine at the private view on Sunday 2nd August, kindly supported by a grant from the Q Fund πŸ™‚

We'll have cocktails and mocktails, who's coming? 🀩

07/06/2026

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Really happy to have some collage necklaces and riveted Dune brooches at  exhibition in Norwich 😍"Here until 4pm with so...
06/06/2026

Really happy to have some collage necklaces and riveted Dune brooches at exhibition in Norwich 😍
"Here until 4pm with some beautiful work exploring themes of disintegration and regeneration, the heritage of craft and women’s creativity. Do pop in πŸ™‚"

Had a lovely posh lunch at Beata's today: look at her gorgeous rose garden!! 😍
05/06/2026

Had a lovely posh lunch at Beata's today: look at her gorgeous rose garden!! 😍

Nice shot of pure colour with these rhodendron blossoms in the park on my amble back from the dentist's 😍
03/06/2026

Nice shot of pure colour with these rhodendron blossoms in the park on my amble back from the dentist's 😍

Lots of lovely eroded brass pebbles on my bench today, waiting to be made into rings and earrings for the wonderful  in ...
02/06/2026

Lots of lovely eroded brass pebbles on my bench today, waiting to be made into rings and earrings for the wonderful in St Ives 😍

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02/06/2026

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GRAVE OF WARRIOR QUEEN IDENTIFIED ON ARTHURIAN ISLAND

According to Cornish folklore, the Isles of Scilly, located off Land's End, are the remnants of the sunken land of Lyonesse, which is associated with various Arthurian figures, such as Tristram and Lancelot. However, the mythical connections to Lyonesse date back to pre-Roman times when the island was thought to be the Celtic equivalent of the Amazonian island featured in the Wonder Woman films. In Brythonic tradition, Lyonesse was said to be the home of warrior women led by Queen Domnu, after whom the regional Dumnonii tribe is believed to have been named.

Although Greek and Roman accounts mention warrior queens among the Britons, and archaeological evidence has shown the existence of islands dedicated to high-status Celtic women, sceptics have doubted whether such an island existed off the coast of Cornwall. However, a 2000-year-old Iron Age grave located on the southern end of Bryher, one of the Scilly Islands, has revealed a significant discovery. The grave, previously believed to belong to a king, has now been identified as that of a woman, buried with a sword and shield.

Recent scientific techniques have revealed that just before the Roman invasion, a warrior queen seems to have ruled the Scilly Isles. This discovery has led archaeologists to initiate a new excavation at a previously unexcavated Late Iron Age graveyard. The exact location of this site is currently being kept confidential. Researchers aim to determine whether other warrior women inhabited the islands during ancient times.

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