This jeweled egg box will always be a favorite treasure at Easter, but you'll love the feeling you get looking....
This jeweled egg box will always be a favorite treasure at Easter, but you'll love the feeling you get looking at it all year through. Featuring original design and exquisite craftsmanship of our Los Angeles studio, it is entirely hand made and finished. Gift boxed to give or to keep.
Forget-Me-Not Egg Box: 1-3/4" L x 1-1/4" H Forget-Me-Not flowers are messengers of friendship and hope.
--GOLD The egg is finished in rich 14K gold. Flowers are pink, aqua and violet, accented with aurora borealis crystal
--SILVER The egg is layered in silver. Pink-lavender flowers over a deep blue background. Set with clear crystals.
And, now, the background story-- The Easter Egg Decorating Contest:
The first time I received recognition as an artist, it was at the egg decorating contest in my town. Just before Easter, our local park hosted an annual contest for neighborhood children. What kid could pass up a chance to get gluey and glittery? Dozens of us packed the park's gymnasium, set up with work stations of paint, dyes, glitter, sequins and beads.
Each child brought their own egg to decorate. The one my mother gave me was a small, grade A sized egg, not much room to apply the ornamentation I imagined it would need. My friends set to work painting, gluing and then rolling their big AAA eggs in everything sparkly. Somewhat dispirited, I cut a scalloped paper cup bottom to elevate my little egg, which became a collar. Then I formed two slender rabbit ears from stiff white first aid tape. A girl bunny was taking shape.
I mixed paint to delicately rouge her cheeks and inside her ears. Then I illustrated her face, eyes and whiskers in brown and silver with a tiny brush. After tying a thin pink satin bow around her paper collar, "bunny girl" was finished. She looked bright and happy, but my egg didn't seem half as special as the others. Mine had no glitter, no sparkle and no sequins. On the judging table, lined with colorful entries, I placed my bunny egg toward the back.
When judging was finished, every entrant filed by the table to view all the eggs and awards. Second and third place honors were taken by several glitter-drenched masterpieces. And, astonishingly, right beside them was my Bunny Girl, sitting atop a blue satin first place ribbon.