J9 Glass Magnified handmade molten gems with layers and layers of color and clear, tugged, pulled, dragged and dripped for your pleasure... I was entranced. Thank you!

I will never forget the first time I saw a handmade glass bead. It was in Dillon, Colorado, 1998 (Luna Beads). Up to that point I had been making seed bead jewelry and doing torchwork with metal since I was a kid, but I had never seen anything like this. I was in a bead store: a clear glass cylinder held around a hundred colorful glass beads, each one unique. The shop owner’s husband was a lampwor

ker, and he had made them. My awestruck enthusiasm hit a chord in the shop owner, and she changed the course of my life with one phone call to her husband (for which I am so grateful). This sweet couple invited me to their house one afternoon, where he showed me the basics, and then just let me play on the torch by myself for a while. He sold me his old “Hot Head” torch, a book a few rods…then, I was off and running…and totally obsessed…(***thank you, Stony***)
My work with hot glass and beadmaking blossomed into a full-blown business, as Alpine River Glassworks, in 1999. I developed a hair accessory called a “Hairnoodle”. After creating a business plan, getting the appropriate licensing and tax things figured out, I would come to find that I was, without a doubt, the toughest boss I had ever worked for. I tasked myself with an intense production schedule, making beads (mostly Hairnoodles) for wholesale, retail, craft shows and bead shows all over the country. During this time, I moved to Jacksonville, Oregon, for a year, then came back to Colorado, and lived in the Colorado Springs area (where I remained for about 10 years). Looking back, I am so grateful for the hours and hours of production work that was so necessary to acquire the skills required to excel with this medium. I did quite well selling the Hairnoodles at art and craft fairs in Colorado, New Mexico, Maine, California and Oregon. In addition, I began to design suites of jewelry, as well as adding additional signature pieces. All of the work is truly one-of-a-kind, and after a few years, I began to sign them. (1999-2005 signature is JC , for Jannine Cecilia (middle name). Currently, the J9 signature has been in effect from 2005 to present day. There was a stint as well, in that pieces were signed JC2. Eventually, I also presented my work at the Bead and Button Show (for Bead and Button Magazine) in 2004, as well as in 2005, in Milwaukee, WI. During this time frame, I was one of the featured artists in the March-April 2005 edition of Lapidary Journal’s Step-By-Step Beads with step-by-step instructions on how to create a daisy millefiori-encased garden bead. In the summer of 2005 I was filmed for a spot on HGTV’s “Crafters Coast-to-Coast,” creating a murrine cane face bead. Later that year I had photographs in The Flow magazine (Volume 2, Issue 4) for one of the first “Women in Glass“ issues. I was able to attend the ISGB (International Society of Glass Beadmakers) Gathering in Portland, Oregon in 2005. I was invited to teach bead making at the Bemis School of Art in Colorado Springs, to promote the Chihuly exhibit that would be at the Fine Arts Center for several months in 2005. It was a wonderful opportunity to witness the public truly appreciating the material that they were to admire in the gallery. I had been a full time lamp worker for five years at this time in my career, and I still love to teach. (Currently, I offer private lessons in Manitou Springs, Colorado, as well as with Aurora Borealis Glassworks in Albuquerque, NM )
I am truly looking forward to this next step in the evolution of my career as an artist and a teacher. My most recent work explores new concepts in glass jewelry and accessories. These collections are becoming more and more refined, and I am eager for the future. This future will include: creation of large-scale sculpture, lit wall installations, as well as developing the jewelry line into whatever comes next….

05/31/2026

Oooo! Spaaaaarkly. ❤️

05/26/2026

Fellow beadmakers that follow my page- did you know about Beads of Courage? Check it out.They are donated beads from glass artists that children in treatment collect to show their progress. I have not donated to them in years. Apparently they are low on beads. Gonna hook em up. It is a really amazing organization. Check it out. ❤️https://www.facebook.com/share/1J9BGdD5Bp/

Helping children coping with serious illness RECORD, TELL and OWN their stories of COURAGE!

Come see me at the Manitou Art Center tonight from 5pm - 8pm, and Saturday at the Altitude Makers Market!
05/02/2026

Come see me at the Manitou Art Center tonight from 5pm - 8pm, and Saturday at the Altitude Makers Market!

05/01/2026

. Lotus style with many layers. Wheeeeee!!!

Y'all. Can you do me a solid and subscribe to my You Tube channel? I need less than 100 to hit 1000. Thank you! I usuall...
04/27/2026

Y'all. Can you do me a solid and subscribe to my You Tube channel? I need less than 100 to hit 1000. Thank you! I usually do LIVE s at 2pm MST.

Lampworker/glass artist since 1999. New to painting. I put Love into both mediums, and I enjoy sharing my process LIVE. It is such a pleasure to learn more from the art community, and meet more art enthusiasts. Thank you. Please see my website: j9glass.art

04/26/2026

Heeeeere come the earrings! I will have them at the Manitou Art Center on May 2nd and The Altitude Makers Market in Manitou on Sunday the 3rd. You will be able to purchase them online soon on my website: www.J9Glass.art

Psst- MOST days at 2pm (MST) I am LIVE at the studio for Two O'clock Torch Time, on YouTube. Please check out my channel...
04/23/2026

Psst- MOST days at 2pm (MST) I am LIVE at the studio for Two O'clock Torch Time, on YouTube. Please check out my channel! Happy Spring!🌼

Lampworker/glass artist since 1999. New to painting. I put Love into both mediums, and I enjoy sharing my process LIVE. It is such a pleasure to learn more from the art community, and meet more art enthusiasts. Thank you. Please see my website: j9glass.art

04/23/2026

Searched: What is the historical significance of glass beads?
Result:
Glass beads hold immense historical significance as early indicators of global trade, wealth, and social status, with roots dating back 3,500 years to Egypt and Mesopotamia. They served as, and are synonymous with, "trade beads," "currency beads," "currency," and "ceremonial items," enabling economic exchange and cultural interaction across continents for centuries.
Usage Examples & Historical Significance:
Global Trade Currency: From the 1400s Age of Exploration, European—particularly Venetian—glass beads were used as a primary form of currency to trade for goods, including in Africa and North America.
Cultural Exchange and Colonization: Beads were used by explorers as gifts to establish relationships. In North America, Native Americans traded with Europeans and incorporated these items into their own art, sometimes replacing traditional materials like shells or copper.
Social Status and Adornment: Across diverse cultures, specific colors and patterns signified wealth, social status, and gender, acting as personal adornment and cultural markers.
Archaeological Dating: The specialized, evolving styles of glass beads are used by researchers to identify and date archaeological sites, particularly in the 16th to 18th century North America.
Symbolic and Religious Use: Beads were used in religious items, such as Venetian rosaries, or as sacred ancestral heirlooms among groups like the Paiwan people.
Synonyms and Contextual Terms:
Trade Beads: Used for exchange between European explorers/settlers and Indigenous populations.
Currency Beads: Specifically used as a form of money.
Seed Beads: Small beads often used in intricate needlework.
Chevron/Rosetta Beads: A specific, highly prized type of Venetian glass bead, famously used for trade.
Lampwork/Wound Beads: Beads created by heating glass rods (traditionally in the Mediterranean/Venice).
Beadmaking techniques, such as those that produce Millefiori patterns, have been a subject of intense craftsmanship, with Venetian artisans on Murano Island dominating production for centuries. The art of glass bead making is even recognized on UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

12/03/2025
05/07/2025

Celebrate Mother’s Day Weekend with a day of shopping, art, and entertainment at The Northfield Street Fairs! This handmade-only art festival, presented by Artisan Markets, will transform Main Street into a vibrant showcase of Colorado’s best artists and makers. - Discover an incredible selectio...

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Manitou Springs, CO
80829

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