My obsession 
with wide-leg pants continues! My newest acquisition is this pair of 
abstract-printed trousers in black, yellow, and green. I saw them on 
Swap.com, but actually refrained for three orders (a grand total of 3 
months) before finally pulling the trigger. I've learned the hard way 
that straight-leg pants with an elastic waistband can tend to look a 
little sloppy, but when the price got down to $2.40, I decided to give 
them a chance.
For their first wear, I decided to pair them with a coordinating pale yellow sweater and sensible black flats.

Nothing
 revolutionary about this outfit, but it did finally afford me the 
motivation to finish and wear this new green and gold pendant that I've 
been ignoring for over a year. I don't exactly remember why I liked it 
enough to buy it in the first place (1 year and 3 months will do that to
 you), but it proceeded to take up permanent residence in my unworn 
jewelry basket because I didn't like it enough to wear it.
 
What
 exactly was wrong with it? Well, partly it was the color. While I love 
green, that particular shade of jade doesn't go with a whole ton of my 
clothes, and the coppery gold metallic chips made it even harder to 
coordinate. Partly, of course, it was that it was not in a wearable 
state. It was just a chunk of glass with a hole in the top. I hadn't had
 the motivation to finish it into a proper piece of jewelry since I hadn't found anything worth wearing it with...and since it wasn't a wearable piece of jewelry, I hadn't had the motivation to look for stuff to wear it with. Vicious cycle, here we come!
Finally fate stepped in. Fate told me, "Valerie, have a look through that old jewelry
 basket and see what you can tidy up. Have a look at this ugly pendant. 
Are you ever going to wear this? Do you think it might be time to just 
sell it off?" I looked back at Fate and said, "Maybe, but let me give it
 another chance."
You
 see, in studying this pendant for the hundredth time, I finally 
realized that one of the other things wrong with it was its shape and 
size. It was just a huge chunk of glass with a miniscule hole at the 
top. The proportions were off. Were I just to hang it on a chain, the 
pendant would look awkwardly large, like an adult's head on a baby's 
body.  Furthermore, by itself, the pendant was too simple. Were I just 
to stick a jump ring through the hole and call it done, it would look 
decidedly unfinished. And so I realized, this pendant was crying out for
 some decorative findings to balance its size and do justice to its 
form. I had an idea that if I strung it from two gold bails rather than 
just one ring, it would gain stability and look regal rather than ungainly.
That
 sounded like a good idea. It sounded like something to think on 
further. I put the piece back in the basket, consigning it to another year of 
waiting.
Until Fate stepped 
in again. Fate was like, "Whooooaaa, there. I let you keep this pendant 
instead of selling it. You're not keeping it for nothing! You're going 
to wear it and you're going to love it! Hmmm, what would go good with a 
green and gold pendant? How about some green and yellow pants?"
And
 Fate pointed to the new pair of trousers hanging in the closet, and my 
destiny was sealed. I was going to have to finish the pendant, because 
there was no piece of jewelry in the world that would have been a better match for the pants.
Because
 I have already turned the story of this simple outfit into a winding narrative, I 
will go light on the details of how I made the pendant into a necklace. 
Here goes. One paragraph. I made my own bails out of 6 twisted strands 
of jewelry wire because I didn't have any
 suitable findings. I hot-glued them to the back of the pendant, because
 I wasn't sure if I wanted that to be its final form, and hot glue is 
easy to remove. I ran a 17-inch length of gold chain through the loops, 
and then I had a green and gold necklace.

 
 
I
 like the way the chain runs parallel to the top of the pendant. I think
 it gives it a distinctive look, and works with rather than against the 
pendant's unusual rectangular shape. However, I feel like the bails are 
still too delicate (they are hardly any thicker than the chain, and I'd 
prefer something a little more chunky to reflect the build of the 
pendant), so at some point, I might replace them with something bigger. 
Or, alternatively, just give up on the pendant, because now that I've 
worn it with the perfect pair of pants, it's probably already reached 
the apex of its existence.