Product code: Handmade real pearl necklace deals with 925 silver cross Susan Ruppel peal+wire
""The heartbeat of First Friday originates from a one-block corridor of 19th Street, but a new gallery space just to the west is pumping some fresh blood into the monthly downtown event. Susan Ruppel hopes to coax people from the arts district to check out Wire + Pearl, her store/gallery on 17th Street. "We're right around the corner from deals the Guild House," she said. Serving as a cornerstone of Wire + Pearl is Ruppel's jewelry line -- earrings, bracelets and necklaces -- incorporating gemstones and antique rosaries, lockets and other "vintage treasures" she's found scouring flea markets and the Internet. "I really love to work with old pieces and wish I knew the stories behind them." The stay-at-home mom has been designing for more than 20 years, having sold her work in galleries in Laguna Beach, Philadelphia and Buffalo, N.Y., as well as twice-annual shows from her home. Ruppel, 59, took over the space when she and her husband, Jim, bought the building as an office for his business"".
""The heartbeat of First Friday originates from a one-block corridor of 19th Street, but a new gallery space just to the west is pumping some fresh blood into the monthly downtown event. Susan Ruppel hopes to coax people from the arts district to check out Wire + Pearl, her store/gallery on 17th Street. "We're right around the corner from deals the Guild House," she said. Serving as a cornerstone of Wire + Pearl is Ruppel's jewelry line -- earrings, bracelets and necklaces -- incorporating gemstones and antique rosaries, lockets and other "vintage treasures" she's found scouring flea markets and the Internet. "I really love to work with old pieces and wish I knew the stories behind them." The stay-at-home mom has been designing for more than 20 years, having sold her work in galleries in Laguna Beach, Philadelphia and Buffalo, N.Y., as well as twice-annual shows from her home. Ruppel, 59, took over the space when she and her husband, Jim, bought the building as an office for his business"".