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A Delicate Balance

The founder of A Nod to Design pairs beads and chains in her harmonious jewelry designs.

By Shivaun Watchorn
February 11, 2026

Photo by Kris LeBoeuf

Wenjing Yang started making jewelry as a hobby, giving her creations to friends and loved ones as gifts. But the Portland, Oregon–based jewelry designer, who sells her work under the name A Nod to Design, encountered a noxious roadblock. About a year into working with metal, the toxic effects had started to take root. “My lungs had a lot of problems with the soldering and the fumes,” she says. “I had this cough that nobody could figure out.” She needed to find a balance. 

So she did. In 2019, Yang was playing around with materials when she hit upon the idea of using beadwork in her jewelry. It was a logical fit. “After the metal jewelry, I thought maybe I should use a material that’s more friendly,” she says. “With beading, you use a thread and needle, which I’m so familiar with as a clothing designer,” she says. In necklaces such as Serendipity, Eternity, and Layer, cascading sheets of tiny beads are combined with dainty chains in silver, gold, and brass to create art deco–like compositions. Stitched together, the glass beads in Yang’s bracelets, necklaces, rings, and earrings take on significant heft. Placed beside the delicate chains, there’s an equilibrium to the work. “Chains have a lot of movement and fluidity, and beads can provide structure,” she says. “They complement each other.”

Photo by Kris LeBoeuf
  • Photos by Kris LeBoeuf

Yang, 47, took a circuitous path to making jewelry that began in childhood. Raised in Hangzhou, China, a city of 11 million near Shanghai, she began studying with an art teacher at age 11 in order to gain admission to the China Academy of Art, an elite fine arts college. The school’s rigorous curriculum included both Western and Chinese art. In her final year in the program, she focused her studies on fashion design. 

During college, Yang met an American man who became her husband. The pair moved to the United States in 2001 and settled in Portland, where her husband studied acupuncture, in part to explore avenues of healing after an ACL tear he suffered while in China. Yang found Portland’s sportswear-dominated fashion industry a poor fit—Nike’s global headquarters are in nearby Beaverton—but she found work with the clothing brand Suzabelle, where she handled manufacturing and technical design, and worked at the children’s clothing company Hanna Andersson for two years. 

Burned out by the demands of the fashion industry, Yang turned her attention towards jewelrymaking, devouring instructional YouTube videos for tips. Yang found that her skills from fashion transferred well to her new vocation. “For one, it’s 3D pieces, kind of like clothing,” she says. “With clothing, you have to understand the construction of the pieces, how it fits, the material, all of that.”

Photo by Kris LeBoeuf

“With beading, you use a thread and needle, which I’m so familiar with as a clothing designer.”

— Wenjing Yang

Yang’s first jewelry-retailing experience was at a small holiday market in Portland. To her surprise, it was a smashing success—customers and friends encouraged her to find a gallery and stockists around town. By 2022, she was selling her work at MAD About Jewelry and Shoppe Object in New York City and in museum stores. And she started selling work at the American Craft Council’s American Craft Made Baltimore and American Craft Fest in St. Paul too, though, she says, “I don’t like travel too much.” 

Much of Yang’s work with A Nod to Design is solitary by nature. Like many working artisans, she balances family life and business, beading and doing metalwork in short bursts. The informal schedule, while convenient, has made pricing her work challenging. For many pieces, she honors prices she set early on, before she fully grasped what the market would bear and the hours and materials that each piece required. “In order to make it really sustainable, I should really raise [my prices] 50 to 60 percent,” she says. “As a designer, I’m pretty seasoned, but I’m not a seasoned businessperson.”

Photo by Kris LeBoeuf
Photo by Kris LeBoeuf

But Zhou Qian, a close friend from China, moved to the US to be near Yang, and she helps manage the business. Yang wholesales her work through Portland-based jewelry retailer Betsy & Iya. And the work itself is meditative, acting as a creative and personal exorcism. “Beading is one way to let things go and let things come out,” she says.

Yang’s well of inspiration spans the globe: architecture, the natural environment in her adopted hometown of Portland, the seed-bead sculptures and jewelry of Baltimore artist Joyce J. Scott, ethnic costumes in Southeast Asia, beadwork from Africa and the Indigenous cultures of the Americas, and Western high-couture jewelry have all sparked ideas for designs and color schemes. Yang similarly sources the materials for her work from all over: chains and metals come from Rio Grande Jewelry Supply, she orders glass beads from Caravan Beads in Maine, and she finds one-off “interesting little things” on Etsy and at gem shows. 

But at the end of the day, A Nod to Design—in name and in Yang’s jewelry compositions—is an acknowledgement of the beauty running through all of human creative endeavors. “All the different designs—it doesn’t matter which culture or which place—if it’s a great design, it can move anybody,” she says. “It’s universal.”

Photo by Kris LeBoeuf
  • Photo by Kris LeBoeuf
  • Photo by Kris LeBoeuf

Shivaun Watchorn is an editor at the American Craft Council.

See more jewelry from A Nod to Design online.

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