• Flair with Care

    * To receive your promo code valid for $5 toward your online purchase of Elva Fields Flair, please do one of the following:

    - share a link to this post with a friend via email (and be sure to cc us so we can email your code!)

    - forward your original email from us to a friend (again, don't forget to cc us!)

    - comment on our Instagram post, tagging at least one friend in your comment

    If you'd prefer to contribute your $5 to Dare to Care Food Bank, rather than use it as a shopping discount, we'd love to help - just let us know by typing DONATE in the gift notes during your online checkout process, and we'll donate the $5 to DTC's efforts in feeding the hungry in our local community.

    Posted by Emily Maynard
  • Summer is Here!


    Welcome to Summer, friends! I wasn't sure I'd actually be able to pull off any semblance of a "real" collection, since showrooms, markets, trade shows, and travel have been closed these past few months, severely limiting my ability to source materials for the jewelry I love to make. As it turns out (and like so many of us these days) I decided to get creative with the resources I do have, and I've had SO MUCH FUN designing a collection that feels rooted in the traditions of color and craftsmanship here at Elva Fields but also fresh and new - a shift from all of our previous collections, really.

    I've rarely been able to create multiples of designs, simply because of the one-of-a-kind nature of the vintage components I typically incorporate, but this time around, I chose beads and materials that are vintage-inspired, but with availability that allows more than one of you to enjoy each design! Yes - all 10 of these Summer styles are small-batch beauties...some created in larger quantities than others, all created with love and joy, and all by hand with heart. 

    You'll see glass beads from India, knotted nylon cording, hand-tied tassels, fun glass charms in the shape of fruits and veggies, patterned glass beads from Africa, and even a kiddo-craft-turned-favorite-summer-accessory. It all feels so fun and relevant right now!

    The best part? I'll donate $10 of each necklace sold to your choice of among four phenomenal organizations working - each in their own beautiful way - for social justice and equality: The Loveland Foundation, Equal Justice Initiative, the National Bail Fund Network, and Change Today, Change Tomorrow. (You can read and learn a little more about each of them in each product listing in the collection!) 

    Thank you for taking the time to see what I've created for you this season, and I hope the designs bring some much-needed uplift and hope to your days. Here's to celebrating life's vibrancy and variety right where we are, friends!

    XO

    Emily 

     See & Shop the Summer Collection

    Posted by Emily Maynard
  • Spending Wisely


    I am not an expert, nor do I feel I really even have a shred of an idea of how to proceed in the face of what feels like an overwhelmingly broken, suffering world. And I'm becoming (slowly and fumblingly) more aware of the life my white privilege affords me.  I can only speak from my own experience, and I'd never presume to know what is best for anyone else, so I'll only share what has been a fit for me so far as I find my way through this heartbreaking time in my home town of Louisville, where the police officers who murdered an innocent young black woman in her own home have yet to be held accountable nearly three months later, and in this country, where systemic racism and inequality for hundreds of years have led us to horrific realities.

    I deeply believe in the idea that we each have an inner guidance system that calls us toward our purpose, our highest self, and our ultimate good. I have been listening to the song "Hammer and a Nail" by the Indigo Girls on repeat lately, and while several lines speak so clearly to me about taking action, one especially is inclusively encouraging: "If I have a care in the world, I have a gift to bring."  If I care, there is a place for me to contribute my particular abilities, knowledge, experience, hope, love, and light. If you care, too, perhaps some of these resources resonate for you and inspire your own gifts as well: 

    Brittany Packnett Cunningham and this article by her helped me to better understand my unearned privilege and gave beautiful words to the feeling (often uncomfortable, but so be it) I have deep in my soul about my responsibility, my obligation, and my genuine desire to live differently.

    I watched Rachel Cargle's public address on Revolution on Saturday, and I suspect that is just the teensiest beginning of what she will teach me. She has created learning resources available by monthly subscription (PAY PEOPLE FOR THEIR WORK!) called The Great Unlearn, and I look forward to expanding my awareness that way.

    There are many reading lists circulating now to help educate us all on issues of racism, anti-racism, white privilege, untaught American history, oppression, mass incarceration, police brutality, activism, about and by BIPOC.  (Layla F. Saad not only wrote one of these books herself, but also shares her own bookshelves full of her favorite titles.) Many of these publications are currently sold out on Amazon and vendors are engaging in price-gauging. (I will not support that kind of manipulative, opportunistic behavior.) I'm anxious to get started on a few, but I'm willing to place an order with my local bookstore, and I'll wait to receive the books as soon as the publisher can distribute them.

    I have been following or have begun following lots of Instagram accounts for resources and information, including Black Coffee with White Friends, Chani Nicholas, Ibram X. Kendi, Ray Emmanuel, Be The Bridge, The Conscious Kid, Until Freedom, NAACP, Check Your Privilege, and Campaign Zero.  

    Here locally, I am especially interested in the voices of Jecorey Arthur, Charles Booker, Louisville's Black Lives Matter chapter, Louisville Showing Up for Racial Justice (LSURJ), and Louisville's nonprofit news station 89.3 WFPL.  (Many of the organizations listed will have chapters in your own community, too!)

    I have made or will make donations to the Louisville Community Bail Fund, the NAACP, and the Loveland Foundation, and I pledge to continue my support of BIPOC vendors and BIPOC-owned businesses in my personal and in my professional life. (Elva Fields has historically sourced materials from vendors and businesses owned by people of color, and I will continue to make that a priority.)

    I'll be voting on June 23rd in Kentucky's primary elections. (Kentucky peeps, go to GoVoteKY.com or call 502.574.5700 to request a ballot if you'd rather not visit the polls in person.) To determine the State Senatorial candidate that best aligns with my values, I'll watch on KET as host Renee Shaw discusses the 2020 Democratic primary election for the US Senate with candidates Charles Booker, Mike Broihier, and Amy McGrath. The conversation will air at the following times on the stations listed:

    • Monday June 1, 2020 8:00 pm ET on KET

    • Tuesday June 2, 2020 6:00 am ET on KETKY

    • Wednesday June 3, 2020 6:00 pm ET on KETKY

     

    There are lots of petitions circulating on behalf of victims of police brutality and violence, including George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, (this one, too!) and signing those brings powerful numbers that can hopefully sway those in power to take more swift legal action against those who committed these disgusting and awful crimes. 

    And, if I'm feeling I can add my voice to my written word and name, I can call the Louisville Mayor's Office at 502.574.2003 or I enlist the help of an organization working on behalf of Breonna Taylor to make calls to the appropriate offices handling her case. Grassroots Law Project also posts helpful action checklists for calls, emails, and petitions.

    ~

    Mostly, I'm going to listen to learn, pray for guidance on how best to take inspired action, and take those steps with humility, courage, and a sense of the gifts I hope I have to bring to this world. 

    Be well, friends.

     

    (quote above by Brittany Packnett)

     

     

    Posted by Emily Maynard
  • Because We Are All Connected

    We're all connected, one to another as humans in this life experience. Our love knot earrings symbolize our in-this-together-ness and will offer half of their retail price to help others in need, specifically young children separated from their families at the border. Through Together Rising, every $10 we donate will help reunite these families thanks to the tireless work of organizations like the Florence Project and KIND who navigate the legal system on behalf of immigrant children.

    Based on a vintage design and being produced in small batches for us, we'll have a limited edition collection of 50 of each style (sterling silver over brass or 14 karat gold over brass) available to ship in mid-August. If we sell all of these earrings, we'll be able to make a contribution of $1000 toward making a difference in devastating circumstances, and these earrings may perhaps be a symbol of connectedness AND hope when we need it most. 

    Thank you for considering joining us in helping love others well. Together we can do great things, friends.

    Shop the earrings here.

    Posted by Emily Maynard
  • For Mom

    Make a difference in another's life in honor of the mother who makes a difference in yours. Our latest limited-edition earring--just in time for Mother's Day--is an updated version of our vintage love knots, this time with a gorgeous golden banded interlace design, a symbol and reminder of connectedness.  

    A portion of each earring purchase supports your choice of three amazing and worthwhile organizations that work each day to change lives and serve others with compassion, kindness, and respect:

    • The Cabbage Patcha 106-year-old organization that reaches at-risk families and youth through recreational, educational, and service-based programs and opportunities from tutoring, mentoring, after-school classes, scholarships, and much more.
    • Kentucky Refugee Ministries : providing resettlement services to refugees through faith- and agency-based co-sponsorship in order to promote self-sufficiency and successful integration into the community.
    • The Healing Place : reaching men and women suffering from drug and alcohol addiction through one of the nation's most effective and hopeful programs, providing tools for recovery and restoring productive lives

    Your gift will arrive wrapped and ready for giving with a note explaining the impact of the earrings and the specific charity they support.  It is our hope that this small-batch style may be of service to the greater good, bringing love and light on this Mother's Day and beyond.

    Shop the earrings here.

    Posted by Emily Maynard