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Born in
Heilbronn
,
Germany
, Heinrich grew up in the vineyards of her family’s winery. Used
to keeping herself busy, she collected pods, snail shells and
broken glass pieces to make jewelry. She strung together dyed
noodles and dried them in the sun to make necklaces. “The
inspiration to make jewelry has always been with me” she tells.
Graduating from dried noodles she worked with
glass beads and silver wire jewelry as a teen, selling her pieces
on a piece of velvet on the streets of her home town.
Eventually she signed up for jewelry
instruction and after graduating with top honors in
Germany
she won a scholarship to continue her studies in the
United States
.
Here she earned a masters degree from
RIT,
met her husband Gregory, a doctor of chiropractic and built a
studio with beautiful light open space, arched windows and
skylights.
Just as her jewelry is a delicate balance
between hard geometric lines and flowing organic shapes, her life
is a balance between raising her two young children Tanya and Timo
and spending time in her studio. Heinrich welcomes this challenge
stating that it forces her to live completely in the present time
consciousness. In her free time Heinrich enjoys traveling, hiking,
skiing and ballroom dancing.
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