$70.00
Beautifully textured wood matchstick dangle earrings in sterling silver … nice long swingy mismatched earrings ... jewelry on fire!

match
/maCH/
noun: match; plural noun: matches
: a short slender piece of flammable material (such as wood) tipped with a combustible mixture that bursts into flame when slightly heated through friction (as by being scratched against a rough surface)

- approximate matchstick measurement - 1 5/8“ (42mm) x less than 1/8” (3mm)
- the matchstick is 3D and beautifully textured on all four sides
- sand cast from 2 different wooden matchsticks so each earring is slightly different
- sterling silver (.925 silver)
- photographed with a US dime and inch ruler for scale

I’ve sand cast two wood matchsticks in sterling silver, so each is slightly different, and then had them lost wax cast in sterling silver.
Hand crafted jewelry where how it's made matters.

Find the matching sterling silver matchstick pendant here
Find more match stick jewelry here.

The iconic matchstick, something we don’t really think about but so useful when we need to make fire … it took 1000 years and many scientists and inventors to create a safe self-igniting source of fire.
It was only in the last 200 years that the match stick we love and use today was developed, first with an English chemist, John Walker, who invented the friction matchstick in 1827, but being unsafe it still needed improvement.
Later, Swedish chemist Gustaf Erik Pasch, contributed to Walker’s idea and created/invented the safety match by separating the fire making ingredients and creating a match head and a friction strip, both safe on their own but creating fire when the matchstick head strikes the friction strip. His safety match was patented in 1844.
Too expensive to manufacture, the Swedish industrialist and inventor John Edvard Lundström and his younger brother Carl Frans took the proven patented safety match design by Pasch, improved it and by 1853 began manufacturing the safety match.
More improvements were made to the manufacturing of the safety matchstick and matchbox with striker but it is still essentially the same safety match today … made of pine or aspen wood.

History made wearable!