









|

In
1996, following her BFA in Jewelry and Light Metals at the
Rhode Island School of Design, Debbie Tuch created Glitterlimes
at DB Works; her San Francisco- based jewelry design studio.
Known
for her clean design of contemporary hand fabricated jewelry,
Tuch says her work with precious metals is "reminiscent of
what you might find in a fairy tale set in the future." For
Glitterlimes, she pursues her long fascination with both the
natural and the fantastic by transforming actual slices of
dried fruit, as well as her favorite candy, gum and snacks
into wearable jewels. Some of the fruits she dries include,
every citrus imaginable (3 types of limes, lemons, oranges,
blood oranges, pumellos) and other exotic fruits such as, kiwano
melon, lotus root, starfruit and persimmons. Every piece is
sealed with a self-made glitter resin. Tuch fully preserves
the natural structure of the fruit, then adds an exciting glow
to both decorate and reinforce it. She continues to spread
glitter all around the world, from The East to the West, over
to Japan, and back again to Canada.

The last time you put gum in your hair, it took your mother half
an hour and a jar of peanut butter to get it out. But Debbie
Tuch, creator of Glitterlimes, has made gum, candy, and all
kinds of fruit the most happening things to wear.
Debbie's unique jewelry line began in 1996, when Debbie spread
a glittered resin over dried slices of lime. The unique results
quickly caught the eye of San Francisco residents, and Debbie
took a break from making fine jewelry to experiment with other
kinds of fruit. Before too long, the proceeds from Debbie's little "experiment" were
paying her rent, and Debbie was flying from coast to coast to
spread the good news that was glitterlimes.
Unlike a ruby or agate, Debbie's "jewels" are one of
a kind. Natural variations in fruit make each organic piece more
unique than any diamond. In addition she glitters all kinds of
candy and treats you don't usually wear–at least not on
purpose. Glitterlimes' beauty startles as much through its revelation
of the beauty in everyday objects as through Debbie's skill.
But if the transformation of candy into "jewels" seems
magical, the glitterlimes mythology takes the element of mystery
to a whole new level.
These limes have a life and a story all their own. On Debbie's
website, where people exchange glitterlime stories, one fan
wrote that he used the word "glitterlimes" to describe
anything magical, mystical, or marvelous. Glitterlimes do seem
to turn up in the strangest places, including the cover of
Time magazine, when Venus Williams wore them in the 2001 US
Open.
Making you wonder how such a small company has managed to attract
the attention of people from so many different walks of life.
The answer must be in the attention-grabbing limes themselves,
or in Debbie Tuch, who seems to feel a genuine responsibility
to "bring glitter to the masses." One thing is certain:
The glitterlimes family extends further than anyone knows.
ABOUT
US BLOG EVENTS PRESS GLITTER
PEOPLE FACEBOOK
care
for glitterlimes | glitter
blog | events | contact
us | tshirts | press
and bio | links | FACEBOOK! |





|