The New Barker - January 2008 There seems to be something karmic going on around the Fernandez home in Brandon. Jennifer, a metalsmith who works in her home studio, believes stray dogs find their way to her home, perhaps knowing she will take care of them and help them find their owners. There was Oliver, the Schnauzer Poodle mix who traveled more than a mile before finding the Fernandez home. He appeared in front of her garage one day, where Jennifer was using her blow torch to create a piece of jewelry. Then there was the Beagle strutting along-side Jen's car as she was coming home from the dog trainer with her own two dogs. This little fellow was an insured show dog who lived four blocks away. A few days after Oliver appeared, Jennifer was driving out of her subdivision when a white Pit Bull showed up and stood in front of her truck. There she was in the middle of the road looking into the eyes of the dog, hearing her husbands words, "Jen, you can't save them all." In her rearview mirror she saw a guy in a Jeep barreling down the road, honking his horn. The jeep drove up on the grass to get around Jen and the Pit Bull. When Jen looked back at the dog, he had a look on his face that seemed to say "Hey, I'm okay now;and walked on. Lucky for the dog,Jen was in the right place, at the right time that day. Jennifer has a degree in design from the University of Florida. She first became interested in jewelry as a little girl when her grandmother gave her a bracelet with Jennifer's name on it. Aware of Jennifer's appreciation for sentimental jewelry, her grandmother continued giving her jewelry throughout the years. Once her Jack Russell Terriers, Chili and Ernie, came into her life,Jennifer began looking for sentimental jewelry that would define her with her dogs but couldn't find anything. After learning how to metalsmith at Hyde Park Art Center, she began making her own jewelry. Chili and Ernie inspired her to create her jewelry line, A Tail of Two. "From the moment we got the dogs, my husband and I knew our lives would never be the same. They've made us laugh, they've made us cry, but mostly they've kept me very busy making dog lockets and sharing stories with others about life with a dog;' said Jennifer. Jennifer now teaches at the Hyde Park Art Center. She loves making jewelry so much, she has to have a girlfriend call and remind her to leave the house for appointments. She is such a perfectionist with each piece she creates that no piece leaves until she is happy with it. Recently, Jennifer was working on a memorial piece for a woman who had lost her dog, Tulip, in the California wildfires. "I can't fathom going to work one day and coming home to find both your home and dog gone;' said Jen. She said in creating the memorial she was so overwhelmed with heartbreak and found it hard to let the piece go. "I just wanted to be sure it would be perfect before I released it;' she said.
Metal smith, jewelry designer, dog rescuer, Jennifer has created pieces of jewelry to raise funds for The SPCA of Tampa Bay, The Humane Society of Tampa Bay, Pet
Click to read more | |