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Online Class- Bead & Tapestry Cuffs

December 28, 2021 by Shellie Wilson

If you’ve admired Claudia Chase’s unique beaded tapestry jewelry on Craftsy or in Beadwork, Handwoven and Spin-Off magazines, here’s the class you’ve been waiting for!

Claudia helps new weavers and beaders take the plunge, and shows experienced crafters how to integrate the two techniques for one-of-a-kind results. These addictive designs whip up in as little as 45 minutes and make the perfect handmade gift. Cotton or silk, clay or crystals – try something new and sign up for Bead & Tapestry Cuffs today! 

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Peyote Stitch Pendants And Necklaces: 10 Seed Bead Jewelry Projects To Make

Peyote stitch pendants and necklaces are where seed beadwork starts to feel a little bit magical. Bracelets and rings are lovely, of course, but once you turn peyote stitch into a pendant, a beaded rope, a shaped focal, or a tiny necklace component, the whole technique suddenly feels bigger and more creative. It’s like discovering that the stitch you learned row by row can now become something sculptural, wearable, and beautifully gift-worthy.

If you have already tried peyote stitch bracelets or small beaded rings, pendants and necklaces are a lovely next step. They let you explore flat peyote, tubular peyote, peyote bezels, beaded beads, shaped peyote, and freeform beadwork without necessarily making a huge project. Some designs use a small peyote pendant on a chain, while others turn seed beads into the actual necklace structure.

This is also where your bead stash gets to show off. Those little tubes of Delicas, Toho seed beads, metallic accents, tiny crystals, cabochons, crescent pendants, and special focal beads can all come together in peyote necklace designs that look far more complicated than they really are. I always think peyote stitch has that lovely “boutique jewelry” finish when worked with even beads and good tension — the sort of thing people assume you bought, until you casually say, “Oh, I made it,” and try not to look too pleased with yourself.

These peyote stitch pendant and necklace tutorials include star pendants, peyote tube necklaces, seed bead bezels, beaded beads, geometric focal pieces, freeform peyote ideas, and shaped peyote necklace projects. Some are suitable for confident beginners, while others are better for beaders who already understand peyote stitch and want to build their skills.

Peyote Stitch Pendant And Necklace Tutorials

1. Beads Magic Stella Peyote Stitch Star Pendant

Free Pattern For Pendant Stella

This Stella pendant from Beads Magic is a beautiful star-shaped peyote stitch project that uses Toho seed beads in 11/0 and 15/0 sizes. The tutorial notes that the piece should stay flat during the first rows, which is a helpful reminder for anyone working shaped peyote.

A star pendant is a lovely way to practise peyote shaping without making a full necklace from scratch. Make it in metallics for evening wear, soft cream and bronze for a vintage look, or bright colours for a playful handmade gift.

2. Artbeads Mojave Rain Tubular Peyote Necklace

Mojave Rain Tubular Peyote Necklace Tutorial

This Artbeads tutorial uses tubular peyote as part of a necklace design with a crescent focal. The project instructions show the necklace being assembled around a crescent pendant and seed bead rope, making it a good option if you want peyote stitch to become part of the necklace structure rather than just a small charm.

Tubular peyote is such a useful skill for necklaces because it creates a flexible beaded rope. Once you understand the structure, you can change the colours, length, focal pendant, and clasp style to suit your own jewelry wardrobe.

3. Artbeads Persian Tapestry Peyote Focal Necklace

Persian Tapestry Necklace Tutorial

The Persian Tapestry necklace from Artbeads uses odd-count peyote stitch with TOHO Treasure seed beads and includes a colour pattern diagram for the focal design. This is a lovely project for beaders who enjoy charted patterns and want a necklace that has a strong decorative centrepiece.

Odd-count peyote is especially useful when you want a centred design or balanced motif. If you’ve already tried odd-count peyote in rings or bracelets, this necklace is a nice way to take that skill into a larger wearable piece.

4. Artbeads Cafe Au Lait Peyote Beaded Beads Necklace

Cafe Au Lait Peyote Beaded Beads Necklace Tutorial

This Artbeads necklace tutorial shows how even-count peyote stitch can be used to create tubular beaded beads. The project uses seed beads to make three peyote beaded beads, then joins them into a finished necklace design.

Beaded beads are one of those clever little projects that make you look at seed beads differently. Instead of simply stringing beads, you are making your own focal beads from peyote stitch — very satisfying, and a lovely way to customise a necklace.

5. BeadDiagrams Star Rivoli Necklace

Free Beading Pattern For Star Rivoli Necklace

This Star Rivoli Necklace pattern from BeadDiagrams includes a rivoli pendant design and a coordinating strand. The pattern notes that the modified version starts the rivoli bezel with peyote stitch, which makes it a useful project if you want to explore peyote bezels around sparkling crystal focals.

A rivoli pendant always feels a little dressy, doesn’t it? This would be beautiful for special occasion jewelry, handmade gifts, or a sparkly necklace to wear when you want something more polished than your everyday chain.

6. Artbeads Peyote Stitch Bezel Tutorial

How To Make A Peyote Stitch Bezel

This Artbeads tutorial teaches how to add a seed bead bezel around a cabochon using peyote stitch. Peyote bezels are incredibly useful because they allow you to frame cabochons, stones, glass pieces, and other flat-backed focals for pendant-making.

Once you learn peyote bezels, your pendant-making options open right up. Suddenly a pretty stone, button, vintage cabochon, or handmade clay piece can become the centre of a beaded necklace.

7. Create Whimsy Shaped Peyote Beaded Necklace

Shaped Peyote Stitch Jewelry

This Create Whimsy project article includes a shaped peyote beaded necklace on a RAW chain, combining peyote stitch components with right angle weave. The necklace uses peyote stitch in the teardrop dangles, triangle bail, and tube toggle, making it a lovely example of how peyote can become part of several necklace elements.

This is a good inspiration piece for intermediate beaders who want to move beyond a single pendant. I love projects like this because they show how one stitch can be used in different ways across the same necklace.

8. Lisa Yang Jewelry Hugs And Kisses Peyote Tube Bead

Hugs And Kisses Heart Peyote Tube Bead Free Pattern

This Hugs and Kisses peyote bead pattern from Lisa Yang Jewelry can be used as a pin, earrings, a pendant, or a small decorative beadwork piece. The design features a heart and XO theme, making it especially lovely for Valentine’s Day or friendship gifts.

For a necklace, you could add a simple bail, stitch it onto a backing, or hang it as a small charm-style pendant. It’s a sweet project for using tiny amounts of seed beads while still making something meaningful.

9. Bead Spider Peyote Tube Necklace Video Tutorial

How To Make A Peyote Tube Necklace

This video tutorial is a useful option if you prefer watching peyote tube beadwork being made step by step. Peyote tube necklaces can look intimidating in photos, but seeing the stitch in motion often makes the process much easier to understand.

This type of necklace is wonderful for beaders who like repeating patterns and neat structure. Choose three colours for a simple chevron or stripe effect, or keep it tonal for something more subtle and wearable.

10. Freeform Peyote Pendant With Agate Slice

Freeform Peyote Pendant With Agate Slice

This freeform peyote pendant tutorial is a lovely direction if you prefer organic beadwork over strict charts. Freeform peyote lets you build around a focal piece, such as an agate slice, using seed beads in a more intuitive way.

This is the sort of project that feels wonderfully individual. No two pendants need to look the same, and you can use bead soup, leftover seed beads, tiny accents, and special focal stones to create something very personal.

Tips For Making Peyote Stitch Pendants And Necklaces

Choose The Right Type Of Peyote Stitch

Flat peyote is ideal for small pendants, shaped motifs, and focal panels. Tubular peyote is better for ropes, beaded beads, tube pendants, and necklace components. Peyote bezels are useful when you want to frame a stone, cabochon, crystal, or flat-backed focal.

Before choosing a project, think about whether you want to make the necklace focal, the chain, the rope, or the decorative beads. That will help you pick the right tutorial and avoid getting halfway through a project that isn’t quite what you imagined.

Use Even Beads For A Cleaner Finish

If your pendant includes a chart, motif, or geometric shape, Miyuki Delicas or TOHO Treasures are usually a good choice because they sit neatly together. Their cylinder shape gives peyote stitch that crisp, woven look that works so well for pendants and necklace focals.

Round seed beads can still be beautiful, especially for freeform peyote and organic necklace designs. They give a softer, more textured finish.

Watch Your Tension

Peyote pendants need enough tension to hold their shape, but not so much that they curl or buckle. This is especially important for flat shaped pendants, bezels, and star motifs.

If your beadwork starts to cup when it should be flat, pause and check whether you are pulling too tightly. Sometimes loosening your tension slightly makes all the difference.

Plan How The Pendant Will Hang

Before finishing a pendant, think about how it will attach to a chain, cord, beaded rope, or jump ring. Some peyote pendants need a beaded bail, while others can be attached with a wire guardian, stitched loop, or metal finding.

A beautiful pendant can look awkward if the hanging point is not balanced. Hold it up before finishing and check that it sits straight.

Turn Small Peyote Pieces Into Necklaces

Not every pendant needs to be large. A small peyote tube bead, tiny heart motif, shaped star, or beaded charm can become a delicate necklace with the right chain.

This is especially handy for gift-making. Smaller peyote pendants are faster to make, easier to personalise, and lovely for using special bead colours without needing a huge supply.

More Seed Bead Jewelry Ideas

If you want a smaller project before jumping into necklaces, try the CraftBits Daisy Ring, which uses Delica seed beads in a sweet floral design. For another tubular peyote-style project, the CraftBits Lighter Wrap is a fun older project that shows how peyote can be used around a shaped form.

Peyote stitch pendants and necklaces are a beautiful way to turn tiny seed beads into something wearable and meaningful. Whether you make a star pendant, a peyote bezel, a beaded bead necklace, a tubular rope, or a freeform focal, these projects give you room to play with colour, texture, shape, and all those little beads you bought because they were far too pretty to leave behind.

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