Alright, so today I’m gonna yap about this Tiffany & Co. bean necklace I messed around with. Buckle up, it’s a bumpy ride.

First off, I saw this bean pendant online, right? Looked kinda cool, simple, y’know? I thought, “Hey, I can probably figure out how to make something similar.” Famous last words, am I right?
The Initial Plunge: Research and Gathering
So, step one: Research. I started scouring the web for bean-shaped beads, silver wire, clasps – the whole shebang. Ended up ordering a bunch of stuff from different places. Amazon, Etsy, some random bead store online – my mailbox looked like a craft explosion.
- The “Bean”: Found these cool ceramic bean-shaped beads. Not silver, but I thought I could paint ’em or something.
- Wire: Grabbed some silver-plated copper wire. Figured it’d be easier to work with than actual silver for a newbie like me.
- Clasp & Jump Rings: Basic stuff. Lobster clasp, jump rings – the usual suspects.
Tools-wise, I just used stuff I already had lying around: pliers, wire cutters, a ruler, and a prayer.
The Fun Begins (Not Really)
Okay, so I had all my stuff. Time to get crafting, right? Wrong. I tried to bend the wire into the shape I wanted for the necklace part. Let me tell you, that wire had a mind of its own. It was all wonky and uneven. I was getting frustrated fast.

I tried using pliers to make it smoother, but I just ended up scratching the silver plating. Ugh. At this point, I was considering just chucking the whole project in the trash.
But I’m stubborn, so I kept going. After about an hour of wrestling with the wire, I finally got something that resembled a necklace shape. It wasn’t pretty, but it was a start.
Next, I had to attach the bean pendant. I used a jump ring to connect it to the wire necklace. Simple enough, right? Wrong again. The jump ring kept popping open! I must have spent another 30 minutes just trying to get that stupid jump ring to stay closed.
Painting the Bean: A Disaster
Remember how the beans were ceramic, not silver? Yeah, I decided to paint them silver. Big mistake. The paint looked all streaky and uneven. It was a total mess.
I tried sanding it down and repainting, but it just looked worse. In the end, I just gave up and left them as they were. They looked kinda rustic, I guess? That’s what I told myself, anyway.

Putting It All Together (Finally!)
After hours of struggling, I finally managed to attach the clasp and jump rings to the ends of the necklace. It was done! Sort of.
The finished product was… well, let’s just say it wasn’t exactly Tiffany-quality. The wire was still a bit wonky, the paint job on the bean was terrible, and the whole thing just looked kinda cheap. But hey, I made it myself! That’s gotta count for something, right?
Lessons Learned:
- Working with wire is harder than it looks.
- Don’t try to paint ceramic to look like silver. It never works.
- Maybe just buy the real Tiffany necklace next time.
So yeah, that was my “b necklace tiffany” adventure. Would I do it again? Probably not. But hey, at least I have a funny story to tell.