Our footprints are all over this planet…..but do we have to stomp so hard!?
My name is Laura Bergman, the creator of Bottled Up Designs. I have lived all my life in the beautiful Pennsylvania Amish Country, where as a child we would dig around old foundations pulling old treasures from the ground from a simpler time.
The love of old glass and bottle digging stayed with me, and have always been an avid bottle collector. One thing that has always bothered me, though, is how we take away the pretty whole pieces, but leave all the broken remains behind for the environment and wildlife do deal with.
When I walk through these pretty wooded habitats, the sun slants through the woods and lights these little pieces of history. The ruby glows in the sun, looking like it’s on fire, amber from old medicine, beer, and the countless broken Clorox bottles used and carelessly tossed there so long ago. Another common find is the pretty ice blue glass of broken Mason jars, and always envision them in someone’s pantry full of the summer’s work “put up” for the coming winter. I am always a little sad when I see the broken depression glass, wondering if during those lean times there was the money to replace the pretty dishware that had broken.
To me, this glass still has history and real beauty behind it, and out of love for the pretty glass and the environment, I now bring home the broken pieces and create my jewelry. Each piece is handmade from this reclaimed glass, and wanting to share the history with those that wear it, have created “The Story of the Glass” detailing for each piece what it was originally, and the approx. age of the glass.
Recently, while walking my dog through a peaceful part of the woods, I spotted a baby fawn and her mother laying in the dappled sunlight. Of course, they caught the scent of us and were up and away, and where the fawn was laying was the broken shards of a cobalt Noxzema bottle. Hoping that she was unhurt, I sighed and picked up the glass to bring it home, wondering once again how we ever thought we had the right to treat our environment so carelessly.
To see all of the pretty vintage colors and how they are wonderfully transformed into beautiful artisan jewelry, please visit www.bottledupdesigns.com.
Read GGG editor Henriette’s review of Bottled Up Designs and this beautiful necklace.





















October 22nd, 2008 at 3:42 pm
Wow, I love this! Not only keeping glass out of landfills but cleaning up our woods of glass left behind and making something beautiful from pollution. Laura you are my hero!
October 30th, 2008 at 12:10 pm
Hi,
Well done this is great work and to use existing aterials is great. I was just wondering how you dealt with the issue of where your silver comes from for the chain and wire?
Thanks
March 10th, 2009 at 11:24 pm
Do you have contact information from this artist? I’d like to talk to her about doing some custom work for me & cannot find her contact information.
Mandy
March 12th, 2009 at 3:05 pm
Hi Mandy, you can contact Laura via her website, here: http://www.bottledupdesigns.com/contactus.htm
November 4th, 2009 at 3:49 am
Hi Laura…your artful reuse of glass touches my heart. Your pieces are beautiful! I have been collecting beach/sea glass for 40+ years from beaches all over the world, and have started making jewelry with my dusty treasures. Living as a Florida transplant in Colorado for several decades now has me longing for my connections with the ocean. I would love to connect with you and our common love of discarded history; yours from the land, mine from the sea. I have also loved poking around old ghost towns in the high country here in the Rockies and have some great bottles…our history here is much younger than that of yours back East, so finding a 120 year old bottle here is “gold”! If you are so inclined, do get back to me and we can collaborate…or at least gab away about old glass:)
Christie Ann Miller
Sea My Heart
camiller9@msn.com
720-530-1067