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    Blue Recycled Glass Beads Soup Blue Recycled Glass Beads Soup

    Blue Recycled Glass Beads Soup

    Original price was: $60.00.Current price is: $45.00.
    Funky Frog's Bead Soup.... a collection of gorgeous African Recycled Glass beads...  This Bead Soup is various Blue Recycled Glass Beads in various sizes and shapes.There are three Beads Soups to choose from. You will receive all the beads in the image.
  • 6 large, tubular Dark Blue Recycled Glass beads with brown speckles and a smooth, polished satiny finish. The bead is about 27 mm x 17 mm. These beads are handmade so there will be differences in colour and size among the beads. These beads are made by an innovative Bead Designer named Tet. It is always a pleasure to go and see what new designs he has come up with in his small cottage industry in the outskirts of Accra. $5/6 beads
  • 6 Dark blue with white speckles Tubular Recycled Glass Beads. These beads are 11x12 mm and even though they are polish satiny smooth have an earthy look. There are two different blues shown in last image - this is the darker blue. $3/6 beads
  • 6 Royal Blue  with white speckles Tubular Recycled Glass Beads. These beads are 11x12 mm and even though they are polish satiny smooth have an earthy look. There are two different blues shown in last image - this is the lighter royal blue. These beads were made for Funky Frog by Tet , an innovative bead designer. $3/6 beads
  • Out of stock
    A strand of blue Kakamba Prosser Beads about 34" long. The glass beads are about 8 mm in diameter. These are great spacer beads. Prosser beads are by extension any beads made by the 'Prosser' technique, invented by the Prosser brothers in 1840 in England for the purpose of making buttons. The process consists of molding a cold paste under great pressure and then firing it. Prosser Beads were distinct from other European trade beads in that they were produced in a great variety of colors, and were also translucent. They were received particularly well in the town of Kakamba in the Republic of the Congo – hence the name Kakamba Prosser Beads.

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