Want to know where our vintage Lucite beads all came from? One of the most frequently asked questions when a shopper enters our store or shops with us online is âWhere did you get all of those fabulous
It could be because when one walks into our store at The Beadinâ Path, theyâre greeted with a 18 foot wall full of it. Itâs colorized from left to right and spans almost the entire back wall of one room in our store. We try to merchandise our entire store & our website in color blocks so that each room or page is a virtual palette of beads. I think those who ask, expect a quick or secret answer. However, thereâs a much longer & more interesting story to how we acquired over 40,000 lbs of vintage Lucite.
Currently the company (Plastic Development) is one of the leaders in the industry for manufacturing earring cards & other plastic-based merchandising for jewelry and accessories. When you order these from many well-known companies that distribute them, chances are theyâre made by these folks in R.I. Because they had the need to expand their business and move some of their less physically-able employees to the first floor space, currently housing all of âthose beads,â they needed them moved out and moved out fast.

My mother Jan & I decided it would be worth a treck down I-95 South to at least check this stock out. And if it was a wash, weâd head on over to Providence Place & do some shopping (they have an H&M and a Restoration Hardware there!). Well we never made it to the mall! When we met with the manager of the company we learned more about vintage Lucite than we had ever known before. He had worked at the same company for over 30 years and was there when they had actually made these great beads & parts. They had been commissioned by well-known companies such as Avon, Coro, and Trifari to custom-create colors and shapes for their seasonal lines of jewelry. The quality of these âplasticâ beads was just unmatched. (Yes, I too used to be a âplastic-bead-snobâ!) He explained to us a little about the process where the beads are actually made in a relief process or âcarvedâ from a rod or cane of Lucite. They were not press-molded like many plastics that show seams and are lighter-weight. So, when they had overstock, slightly off-color beads from the special order, or simply orders that were not picked up, they stashed them in âthe bead room.â

After some research and much number crunching and decided to bring a group of helpers down to Rhode Island the following week with 2 20â UHaul trucks. Wow! We had no idea what we had gotten ourselves into. We worked a 12 hour day with 10 people we brought down as well as many of the warehouse workers who chipped in to help us. Sure there were lots of us âbead girlsâ, but our group also included many big burly guys, all bagging, packing boxes, stacking boxes, wrapping and loading palettes. We finally got the 2 trucks loaded to the ceilings. But we had only packed up about 1/3 of the stock! There was still a whole room of beads & parts: it almost looked as if we hadnât even been there.
â¦and thatâs how it all happened. Thatâs how we acquired over 40,000 lbs of vintage Lucite beads & parts. Surprisingly, two years later we have sold almost half of the stock. When we first brought it home to Maine, I made the comment that I would be that little old lady at 80 years old with a barn full of rotting boxes full of beautiful beads. I guess I was wrong⦠nah, Iâll be that old lady who dies with the most beads yet.
For the last couple of years, a really fun gal named Danielle has been purchasing lots of our
vintage Lucite stock for her very funky & successful line of jewelry. She has a great business and sells her wares mostly over in Europe (smart chic, considering the plight of the US Dollar right now). Anyway, this lady
knows her plastics. She was teaching me a thing or two about our very own stock. And as weâd discuss the differences between Lucite and other vintage plastics, she kept using the term âBest

Plasticsâ to describe where our beads had been made. I kept thinking âWhat is she talking about?â but I didnât say anything because I was afraid that maybe sheâd misheard something that I said or maybe Iâd misheard her. After all: the company we purchased the beads from was called Plastic Development in Warwick, Rhode Island. And Norm, the man who sold them to me had worked for that company for the last 45 years and knew his stuff. He told us all about making the beads himself back in the 70âs and 80âs. So for the first couple of conversations I didnât say anything to Danielle. Finally, when I KNEW that I had heard her say very clearly ââ¦and the beads that came from Best Plastics in Providenceâ¦â I interrupted. âWhat a sec, WHAT are you talking about? You keep dropping this name and I thought I was hearing things. Iâve never heard this name before. As far as I know, these Lucite beads were made by Plastic Development in Warwick, not Providence.â
Thereâs always this veiled mystery that many vendors like to perpetuate. She was buying a lot of beads from us and I didnât want her to think I had anything to hide about where they were from and where we got them. Danielleâs answer was âGeez, I donât know. I thought YOU told me about Best Plastics.â I said âIâd never heard the name until you mentioned it.â And we moved on.

Fast forward a few more weeks. I was at one of our favorite job lot warehouses where I had not been for over 2 years! And evidently Iâve missed out in the last 2 years too because we didnât find a whole lot. Between being pregnant and having a newborn, itâs hard to travel a few hours each way, dig through dirty boxes that are 15 feet in the air, etc etc to do your buying. So weâve been doing a lot of buying via our manufacturers overseas lately, because I can simply send an email from home and viola! Beads! Anyway, I was talking to Anthony who has been in business in the Rhode Island area for many, many years and his business was handed down to him from his Father-In-Law so he knows the industry. I mentioned Best Plastics and asked him if heâd heard of it. He said âYeah, thatâs that warehouse you bought out!â I nearly fell on the floor. I said âBut that company was called Plastic Developmentâ¦â And now youâre about to hear a thing of fables⦠bead myths from years past.
Best Plastics had been manufacturing beads for years, right across the street from Anthonyâs warehouse in Rhode Island. In the early 1980âs, Best decided to shift their focus to manufacturing pressed plastic earring cards and other merchandisers. You know the type: when you go into WalMart and you see tacky earrings on a rounder, theyâre hanging on these grey plastic earring cards with a patch of velvet on them that read âFashion

Earrings.â No matter what part of the world youâre in, when you see these, theyâre probably made by Plastic Development in Rhode Island. Anyway, when they decided to shift their focus, they moved their company from a warehouse in Providence to a warehouse in Warwick and you guessed it, changed their name to Plastic Development. Anthony said âyou know, they offered me that lot of beads and I just had too much plastic.â We purchased over 40,000 lbs so I can only imagine how many thousands of pounds they had offered him.
So, thanks to Danielle, I learned the real name of our beadsâ manufacturer. And thanks to Anthony, we have thousands and thousands of pounds of
Lucite beads to sell. These are the things that intrigue me still after all these years in this business: the lore of the beads. The history. Sometimes you hear these things from vendors and you think âThey must have made that up to get me to buy this strand of beads, but itâs cool.â But the great thing about buying anything vintage, is that it has history. And the most mundane story can seem so riveting when itâs told in the context of something you love. Like beads.