WHAT WEEKLY

Heavy Metal Treasures :: Acid Queen Jewelry

30 April 2014

★ Katie Weber

The next time you’re driving down Falls Rd. headed north, pay attention after you pass The Avenue. About a half a mile down the road, you’ll notice a building with the downstairs painted purple. That is the home of Black Mess Records, a heavy metal record store and home to Acid Queen Jewelry.

IMG_1309-001 IMG_1312

When I walked into Black Mess Records to meet Alex, she was  busy piecing together earrings, building an inventory. After selling more than 300 pieces at Maryland DeathFest last year, she’s knows she’ll need to have even more for the 2014 festival. All the rows of carefully crafted earrings hanging behind the register aren’t even close to what will be available for sale come festival weekend. And while the pieces she’s making now feature iconographies that will no doubt sell, the popular metal festival is by no means the only place her jewelry flies off displays. The current problem? The pictures she’s posting on Facebook hoping to get customers excited about what will be available at DeathFest are generating orders. It’s a good problem to have, but means there’s certainly more work to be done.

IMG_1318.CR2-001 IMG_1315

Having a background in marketing with an emphasis on fashion has been a huge help to Alex as she builds her Acid Queen brand, as well as in co-owning Black Mess with her boyfriend Jo. Through a combination of self-teaching, classes taken at the MICA Jewelry Center and now the Baltimore Jewelry Center, she developed the signature Acid Queen style. The collection includes rings with crystals, as well as cuffs and pendants that are etched metal. But the true centerpieces of her line are pieces featuring found objects.

IMG_1325.CR2-001

No amount of education can teach you the passion Alex has for what she’s creating. When I asked her what her favorite part of the process was, the sourcing and creating or the selling to satisfied customers; it was without a doubt the sometimes frustrating creative process that she enjoys the most. Deciding how to use an antique arrowhead or the best way to use a large bone while making it all beautiful, is what keeps her creating.

IMG_1320

With a clear nod to the occult, there is a natural harmony to each Acid Queen piece. Designed by using materials from a multitude of sources means most pieces are one of a kind. A particular chain may come in limited supply or the focal point of a necklace could be something she picked up while traveling. It’s the uniqueness that makes the Acid Queen line special. No two pieces are exactly alike, even when she’s tried upon request.

IMG_1330.CR2-001

While pieces are designed with those who understand the symbols, crystals, and patterns based on the sacred geometry, they are by no means exclusive. Her crystal point rings (currently available on her Etsy store or at Black Mess) are slightly larger than your traditional stackable ring, and would be a fun way to mix them up. The cuff bracelets and pendants, with the etchings designed by Tom Denney, are unique, with an almost antiqued appeal. But if you have something special in mind, Alex can do that too, as she recently did for a client who wanted a pendent featuring a piece of mantle from one of the Manson murder houses.

IMG_1333.CR2-001

So if you’re looking to add something truly unique to your jewelry collection (or to your collection of metal records) check out Acid Queen Jewelry at Black Mess Records (3853 Falls Rd. Baltimore, MD). And if you’re headed to Maryland DeathFest this year (May 22-25, 2014) stop by their booth.



fashion

Charm City Fashion Show at BMI

Our ongoing exploration of the city has again yielded adventures that traverse the spectrum of the spacetime continuum and uncover…

Navigating Victoria’s Secret

The Star of Mobile Thrifting: STACEY CHAMBERS

Glenford Nunez

Giordano’s Giant Nudes

Lexington Market 10th Annual Fashion Show

nightlife

SCREEN PASS

Around this time of year I receive advance screening DVD’s of hopefully award-worthy movies. I get them because I’m in…

Emily Wells at Cyclops Books

Comedy Noir

Weekends: Totem

Murder Ink at Single Carrot Theatre

Celebration “Honeysuckle Blue”

social innovation

The Good Deed Project

The Good Deed Project How about some free promotion to go along with that warm, fuzzy feeling? Each week, What…

Crossing Cultural Divides in a Rowboat

A Dream in Cherry Hill

Ultimate Block Party

Give Corps turns 1!

Create Baltimore, Take 2

artist profiles

The Blind Biker

All Photos Courtesy of Matt Gilman This Saturday, June 16th at 9pm, the Windup Space will premiere a short film…

Paco Fish

The Tailor at Hour Haus

Telesma: Secret Origins

Brady Starr

For The Love of Vinyl

sustainability

Farmageddon

On Halloween nothing’s more frightening than a bobble headed Mr. Boh hanging out with the Gorton’s fisherman guy. Over the…

Fixing The Future

Welcome to the Free Farm

Big Green Pirate Party

An Ambitious New Charter School Comes to West Baltimore

Strange Folks at Ash Street Garden

technology

Common Curriculum Launch

Founder Scott Messinger excites the crowd with new features on Common Curriculum, designed with teachers in mind. During each school…

The God Particle

From Basement to Best Place to Work in Baltimore :: A Brief History of Mindgrub

The Secret World of Sugaring

Halpern: On Tour and Online

Create Baltimore, Take 2