Today I am reviewing a product that is available in most Walmart ($9.97)and JoAnn ($11.97) stores as well as online on their websites or apps. Amazon has a similar kit on their website, which has more pony beads, and doesn't have the same bead container as the one I'm reviewing.
I was intrigued by this kit because of the bead guide pictured in the lower right of the first picture above. I thought it would be a very helpful thing, and even started envisioning re-doing some of my patterns so that they could be used in that guide as an alternative to the normal method of bead stringing.
I opened the kit and discovered that the beads were packed in individual little plastic bags by color, or sometimes with a few colors in one bag if they all went to one pattern. This made it very easy to put the beads into the storage container. However, there were not enough divided spaces to put each bag into, so several of the bags ended up in the large area that took up half the storage space.
The stiff waxed string was rolled into a bundle that could be tricky to unwind. The lanyard hooks and keyrings were in their own plastic bags.
The instructions were fairly basic, with cord lengths printed on the instruction sheet rather than on each pattern sheet.
The idea with the pattern guide is that you can take the pattern sheets, and put them under the cover of the storage case. Then you can lay out the beads in the ridged areas of the cover, then work the cords through on each side to make your bead pet. They recommend putting the string on a keyring or lanyard hook, then putting that inside the storage container, with the string coming out of the container through a little slot, as shown below.
Problem 1: All the beads are in the storage container, which you can't open once you've put beads on the cover, without messing up all the beads. So you need to count out all the beads you'll need for each beadie onto the table, before beginning.
Problem 2: There's nothing really holding these beads in place as you place them on the cover, so I spent a lot of time trying to get them to stand up and not move.
Problem 3: It was tricky to string the cord through the beads and have the beads stay in place, as mentioned above.
After completing 1 bead pet, I decided to just go back to doing beadies the way I usually do, by picking the beads out of the storage container just before I put them on the string.
After completing the 3rd bead pet, I decided I really didn't like the stiff waxed string, and decided to use my trusty clear plastic lacing.
The bead "pets" that this kit makes are pictured below (popsicles and pizza slices aren't really pets, right?).
Overall I wouldn't recommend this kit unless you are trying to get just the amount of beads you need to make several bead pets. I did have a few extra beads at the end, but not many.
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