Sep 29, 2007

Robbers take $500,000 in jewelry

Jewelry with a retail value of more than $500,000 was taken during a Bellevue robbery, and three men were charged Friday with the theft in federal court.


The charges filed in U.S. District Court in Seattle accuse the men of obstructing interstate commerce through the robbery Thursday.


The defendants were identified as Sergio Santamaria, Omar Richard Castillo and Carlos Vivas. The three were ordered held pending detention hearings.


The charges describe how police responded to a report of a robbery at a Factoria McDonald's restaurant about 9:40 a.m. Thursday and found a jewelry salesman there.


The salesman said he had been assaulted in the parking lot by three men who took his keys, eyeglasses and other items. One man shattered the rear driver's-side window of his vehicle and took a backpack that had jewelry inside valued at $250,000 wholesale and more than $500,000 on the retail market, an FBI affidavit accompanying the charges added.


The men then got in a white minivan and drove off.


The salesman said he is based in California and had been in Portland before coming to Seattle to make sales calls.


He described the men and the van to police, who found the van near Snoqualmie. Police stopped the van was stopped and the men were arrested without incident.


A search of nearby woods found a backpack with an air pistol inside. Jewelry was found inside the van, along with the salesman's backpack and materials believed to have been used in the robbery.


If the men are convicted, they could face up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
Source: nwsource

Marie Antoinette's pearls to fetch more than $700,000










This historically important necklace, which features pearls that once belonged to Marie Antoinette, is up for auction on Dec. 12.

London—By now, the much-maligned "Let them eat cake" phrase, attributed to Marie Antoinette's treatment of the poor, has been ruled out as nothing more than a fable.

That's not to say, however, that the most-famed queen of France's legacy of extreme extravagance is at all false. Marie Antoinette continues to be remembered for the exorbitant amount of money she spent on everything from clothing to jewels.

Auction house Christie's is now offering a part of that legacy to the public. In its upcoming "Magnificent Jewellery" sale, to be held on Dec. 12, Christie's is offering a historically important natural-pearl, diamond and ruby necklace, the pearls of which belonged to Marie Antoinette.

The necklace has never before been offered at auction, and the pearls have been in the same family for more than 200 years, Christie's said in a statement. The necklace is estimated to fetch between about $711,830 and $813,520.

The necklace was made in 1849 and features a fringe of 21 graduated drop-shaped natural gray pearls, each suspended from an old-cut diamond collet surmounted to a diamond ribbon. The ribbon is intertwined with a ruby collar that is set with 12 button-shaped natural gray pearls, mounted in gold.

The historically important pearls came into the possession of Elizabeth Leveson-Gower, the Lady Sutherland, during Marie Antoinette's imprisonment at the height of the French Revolution. The queen gave the pearls, along with the diamonds, to Lady Sutherland for safekeeping.

Anyone caught in possession of this jewelry risked severe punishment, but Lady Sutherland, the wife of the British ambassador, had diplomatic immunity, so she was one of the few who could be trusted to return the jewels when the queen escaped.

The plan was never realized, however. Marie Antoinette was put to death by guillotine in 1793 on the precept of treason.

The diamonds were later fashioned into the Sutherland diamond necklace, and the pearls were mounted on the occasion of the marriage of Lady Sutherland's grandson George Granville William Sutherland-Leveson-Gower to Anne Hay-McKenzie.

"It is exceptionally rare to be able to offer jewels that belonged to Marie Antoinette and which are completely fresh to the market," Raymond Sancroft-Baker, senior director of Christie's Jewellery, London, said in a statement. "The story behind the pearls and their integral integration into this necklace for the Sutherland-Leveson-Gower family wedding in 1849 adds to the fascinating history of this necklace."
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

Zale sells jewelry brand

Philadelphia icon Bailey Banks & Biddle, founded in 1832, is being sold for $200 million to Finlay Enterprises Inc., a retailer with ambitions to build its luxury-jewelry business.


Bailey Banks & Biddle, which has 70 stores in 24 states, has been owned since 1962 by Texas retailer Zale Corp.


Zale, which competes in retail jewelry with Sterling Inc., the Akron operator of Kay and Jared stores, said it wanted to concentrate on its more profitable divisions.


The sale ''is consistent with our strategy to focus on our core moderate-jewelry business and to improve our returns on capital,'' said David Sternblitz, Zale vice president and treasurer. ''Bailey Banks & Biddle stores are beautiful stores and have a tremendous tradition, but the business is less synergistic with the remainder of our corporation.''


The head of Finlay said Bailey Banks & Biddle would be a good fit as it sought to expand its share of the luxury market.


Finlay, of New York, operates luxury specialty-jewelry stores and fine-jewelry departments in department stores.


Chairman and CEO Arthur E. Reiner said the deal would also give Finlay a larger national presence and diversify its revenue streams. It could generate upward of $280 million to $300 million of new revenue for Finlay in fiscal 2008.


Sternblitz said Bailey Banks & Biddle's ''performance was below the corporate average.''


He said Zale, of Dallas, was also in the process of centralizing merchandising functions, including the purchase of diamonds, to increase efficiency. Sternblitz said Bailey Banks & Biddle, which is more of a designer-brand business, did not fit that strategy because the designers supply the product, instead of the company sourcing it directly.


Finlay, founded in 1887, is in 687 department stores, including Macy's, Bloomingdale's, Bon-Ton, Lord & Taylor and Dillard's. It had 2007 fiscal year sales of $762 million and has 4,500 employees. Its shares have been publicly traded since 1995.
Source: ohio

Sep 26, 2007

Miss Vietnam Jewelry Queen to start in October


Receiving applications as early as April, this year’s Miss Vietnam Jewelry Queen, which is aimed to extol Vietnamese beauties as well as jewelry artisans, will start nationwide this October.

The preliminary round will be kicked off on October 13 in HCM City; October 20 in Hai Phong; and in Hanoi on October 27. 30 finalists will compete for the highest title worth VND225million on the final night to be held on November 14.


Besides 225 million dong, Miss Vietnam Jewelry Queen will also be presented with an overseas trip from 5 to 7 days. Smaller prizes worth VND10million each will be given to Miss Photogenic, Best Ao Dai, Best Answer and Best Gown.


As for competing artisans, there will be a VND50million prize for Golden Hands winner; VND40million for Silver Hands; VND30million for Bronze Hands, as well as VND10million encouragement prizes.


Unlike in the two previous years, in this year’s contest, only one jury will judge both jewelry and beauties. According to the organisation committee, the final night will also see performances by well-known singers such as My Tam, Dan Truong and Dam Vinh Hung, and especially, the presence of Miss Vietnam Global 2007 Ngo Phuong Lan.


The organisation committee also said first runner up in Miss Vietnam Global 2007 Teressa Sam might attend the final night. Miss Vietnam Jewelry Queen is being organised by Gold Fashion Magazine, formerly known as Fine Arts and Jewelry Magazine.
Source: vietnamnet

Fine Jewelry Display At Chanel Waikiki


Beginning Sept. 27 at about 7:30 p.m., Chanel Waikiki will display for public viewing its new Fine Jewelry Collection, including three pieces from the Coco & Venise collection which Keira Knightley wears in the new Coco Mademoiselle: The Film.


In the film, Knightley wears two necklaces from the Coco a Venise collection - one worn as an ankle bracelet during the day with a man shirt, and another worn with a Fine Jewelry cuff and a Haute Couture dress for the night in a more formal way, but always with the same idea of movement, happiness and freedom.


One necklace features white gold, diamonds and pear diamonds; and the other one features white gold, diamonds and pearls. The Dentelle de Camelia cuff is made of white gold and diamonds. The three-piece collection is valued upward of $200,000.


The display at Chanel Waikiki will include a total of about 20 pieces and be set up on the third floor.
Source: midweek

Bill Clinton Wears Green Bracelet

Former president Bill Clinton was caught "Green" handed at the VH1 Save the Music 10th Anniversary Gala wearing Simmons Jewelry Co's philanthropic Green Bracelet.


Russell Simmons saw Clinton backstage at the event and seized the opportunity to tell him about the Diamond Empowerment Fund, his initiative that gives back to Africa. The Green Bracelet donates more than $20 from the sale of each to D.E.F. for educational programs in African countries where diamonds are a natural resource.


"I was officially dared by Simmons Jewelry president Scott Rauch to put this bracelet on your wrist before you go onstage," Simmons recalls telling Clinton. "He promised me $25,000 to my charity if you do it," he emphasized.


Clinton paused, looked Russell in the eye, smiled, and grabbed the Green Bracelet, Simmons said. As Clinton spoke onstage on national TV, Clinton waved his wrist in the air with purpose, displaying the bracelet to millions of national viewers.


Clinton and Simmons share the honor of recently being named one of the "25 most influential people of the past 25 years who changed our world" by USA Today.
Source: jckonline

Local Jewelry Company Issues Necklace Recall


A Cumberland jewelry company has issued a recall of children's spinning wheel-metal necklaces due to a risk of lead exposure.

Rhode Island Novelty and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and Rhode Island Novelty announced the recall on Wednesday.

The company said the clasp on the necklaces contain high levels of lead and can be toxic if it’s ingested by young children.

No injuries have been reported.

The 30-inch long link necklaces have a spinning-wheel pendant. The pendant, designed to resemble a car's spinning tire rim, has rhinestones attached to the front, a silver base and measures 2 3/4-inches in diameter.

The item has a clear plastic hang tag with a UPC code of 0-97138-68502-5.

According to the CPSC, the necklace was sold at family entertainment centers, redemption centers, small discount stores nationwide and from rinovelty.com from November 2006 through May 2007. The item cost about $2.

Consumers who bought the necklace should return it to the store where it was purchased or to Rhode Island Novelty for a free replacement item.
Source: turnto10

Jewelry sales help impoverished women in Uganda


Trying on and shopping for jewelry is a treat, but what made it even more special Tuesday night was the fact that the money raised is going toward a good cause.

Bead for Life is an organization that supports women beaders in Uganda who are struggling with AIDS, poverty and violence. Local resident Meghan Dutton was the host and coordinated the bead party held at Hibernian Hall on Wellington Avenue. She first heard of Bead for Life through one of her mother's friends. Dutton previously was a member of ONE, which is an organization dedicated to wiping out poverty.

"It's something I'm really passionate about," Dutton said. "I have so much. I need to help."

When mother and daughter got talking, they decided, "let's do this ... we've got to have a party." Each piece of jewelry that is sold helps Ugandan women feed, clothe and educate their families.

Torkin Wakefield, Ginny Jordan and Devin Hibbard founded Bead for Life in 2004 after they visited and walked through the Acholi Quarter, a refugee camp in the capital city of Kampala. The area is home to hundreds of refugees who fled from the civil war in northern Uganda. While there, the founders noticed women who rolled strips of paper into beautiful beads.

The organization started small, working with a group of 90 Ugandan beaders, but Bead for Life has grown and now works with more than 250 beaders in four groups. The earnings from Bead for Life support more than 3,000 people and the money goes toward food, medicine and school expenses that families previously could not afford.

"It's amazing how it changes peoples' lives," Dutton said.

About 100 people showed up for Tuesday's fundraiser and by the end of the night, almost all of the jewelry was sold. The jewelry was priced from $10-$30 for necklaces and bracelets of various designs and colors. Each bead and piece of jewelry is unique because it is handcrafted from recycled magazine paper.

JoEllen McMahon and friend Mary Helene Chaplin, both of Portsmouth, attended the party. McMahon heard about it through staff members at St. George's School.

"I was really excited to come here," McMahon said. "The work is incredible ... it's emotional."

McMahon bought a long beaded necklace, a three-stranded necklace and two other one-stranded necklaces. "I am just thrilled with all of my purchases," she said.

Chaplin did not know what to expect at the party, but came with her friend because they both make jewelry on their own for enjoyment. After attending the event, the two women are interested in hosting their own Bead for Life party.

Because of the interest in the Bead for Life party, Dutton ordered more jewelry last week. It did not make it in time for Tuesday's fundraiser, but will be available Sunday at about 11:15 a.m. for viewing and purchase at Emmanuel Church, on the corner of Dearborn and Spring streets.

Dutton hopes to host more Bead for Life parties, especially after the success of the first one. "It's just an easy and great way to give money to people who have nothing," she said.
Source: newportdailynews

Bangalore Jewelry Fair Begins Oct. 20

The Jewels of India fair will begin in Bangalore on October 20. More than 100 exhibitors have registered so far, show organizer Expoworld reported September 26.

Exhibitors will feature a wide variety of jewelry such as Kundan and Meenakari work from Jaipur, hand-crafted gold jewelry from Kolkata, antique jewelry and traditional gold jewelry from Tamil Nadu, designer wear diamond jewelry from Mumbai, and modern Italian gold jewelry.

Organizers stated that the facilities would be air-conditioned and host an international pavilion with collections from Thailand.
Source: diamonds

Sep 24, 2007

Jewelry of a higher caliber

There have been many proposals for keeping guns off the streets of this violence-plagued city, but maybe none as unusual as Melanie Brandon's: Melt them down into jewelry.

Runway models wore the gunmetal pieces at Brandon's two shows during Fashion Week in New York.

The jewelry, part of her Melani Von Alexandria collection, was Brandon's creative attempt to address a harsh reality: Philadelphia is on pace for its highest murder rate in a decade.

''Just like a lot of Philadelphians, [I was] frustrated with people getting killed left and right,'' Brandon said. ''Why sit by and complain about what's going on? . . . You have to be part of the solution.''

She wrote a proposal in July and sent it to the mayor, top police brass and the sheriff. It ended up on the desk of Paris Washington, chief weapons officer for the Sheriff's Department. Last month, he escorted Brandon and five confiscated firearms to a local welder's studio.
Source: sltrib

Do your own jewelry

Spending an hour at Beads is an ideal way to get re-acquainted with your creative side, enjoy time with the kids, or create a special gift for a friend.


The Canadian DIY jewelry store is a Shanghai veteran but is often overlooked in the busy People’s Square Mall. The tiny bijouterie allows you to create personalized necklaces, bracelets, hair accessories or key chains using pearls, stones and beads.


The store’s collection is immense, ranging from deep-red coral, turquoise and pink quartz to the more exclusive Czech fire-polished crystals, Italian lamp beads, pewter pearls and Japanese miracle beads. Shoppers are given little gray trays to make their bead selections, after which a shop assistant helps in choosing appropriate wires, ropes and findings to make the jewelry.


Amateur jewelers can seek help from one of the trained assistants while seasoned artisans (or confident first-timers) can head directly to one of the well-equipped workbenches in the store. Prices vary depending on the piece you create.
Source: chinadaily

Sotheby's to sell Kelly and Calvin Klein's pearls










This pearl and diamond necklace and pendant, once belonging to the Duchess of Windsor and now Kelly and Calvin Klein, will be part of Sotheby's "Magnificent Jewels" auction.

Sotheby's will sell three lots of natural pearl and diamond jewels from the collection of Kelly and Calvin Klein as part of its "Magnificent Jewels" sale on Dec. 4.

Historically significant, the pieces include a necklace, pendant and ear clips that were purchased by the Kleins at Sotheby's 1987 auction of "The Jewels of the Duchess of Windsor" in Geneva. The pieces have a combined estimated value of $2.2 million-$3.1 million.

The single-strand natural pearl and diamond necklace by Cartier, once belonging to Queen Mary, who gifted it to her son, the Duke of Windsor, contains 28 natural pearls with an emerald and diamond clasp, estimated at $1.5 million-$2 million. The natural pearl and diamond pendant, by Cartier, circa 1950, contains a 190.6-grain pearl capped with single-cut and round diamonds, estimated at $400,000-$600,000. The pair of natural black and white pearl and diamond ear clips by Van Cleef and Arpels, circa 1957, are estimated at $300,000-$500,000.

Prior to the auction, the pearls will be featured in a worldwide pre-sale exhibition, with stops in Asia, Europe the Middle East and the United States as well as Sotheby's New York from Nov. 29-Dec. 4
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

Artist Turns Money into Jewelry

Artisan Vivian Lilly from Hinton creates rings out of rare coins.

He uses a hammer and a file to smooth the coins and shape them into rings.

Lilly buys coins like half-dollars from shops across the country to turn into the unique jewelry.

The work takes him about three hours per ring.

Lilly calls the work a hobby, not a business.

He's been doing it for 50 years. "I was working at a refinery in Virginia in 1957 and we did something one day and I thought if we can do that with that, then I can do that with a coin. So after many, many trials and errors I was finally able to complete one" said Lilly.

Senator Robert C. Byrd has bought three rings from the local artist.

The rings are on sale on Tamarack.
Source: wvnstv

Laurel Burch, Artist, Dies at 61


Laurel Burch, who as a 20-year-old single mother found metal in junkyards to hammer into jewelry to support her two children, and went on to win distinction as a fanciful designer and success as a savvy businesswoman, died on Sept. 13 at her home in Novato, Calif. She was 61.

Rick Sara, her husband, said yesterday that the cause was complications of osteopetrosis, a painful bone disease she had her entire life, suffering more than 100 bone fractures as a result.

Ms. Burch translated her visions of “fantastic felines,” mythical animals, colorful blossoms, butterflies, moons, hearts and imagined people, among myriad other imaginings, into colorful enamel jewelry, paintings, T-shirts, scarves, ceramics and tote bags, which were sold by thousands of stores. Forbes magazine in 1985 said she had created a niche between high-volume, low-price costume jewelry and high-priced designer lines like Paloma Picasso’s for Tiffany.

She told Women’s Wear Daily in 1986 that she wanted to become “one of the design influences in the world.” She also loved being the chief executive of the company named after her and paid close attention to the details of how department stores marketed her products.

But her passion was art, and even as she churned out hundreds of products, her husband said that 90 percent of her designs derived from her original paintings.

A woman who lived in pain, she said her goal was to pass on her joy. Ms. Burch described herself this way on her Web site:

“I live within the vivid colors of my imagination ... soaring with rainbow feathered birds, racing the desert winds on horseback, wrapped in ancient tribal jewels, dancing with mythical tigers in steamy jungles.”

Laurel Anne Harte was born in the San Fernando Valley of California on Dec. 31, 1945. She grew up in a broken home; her father married three times, her mother twice. She said in an interview with The Marin Independent Journal in 1995 that as a girl she felt emotionally unstable and untalented. She found some measure of peace in playing the guitar, dancing and drawing.

She left home at 14 with only a paper bag of clothing, and she cleaned houses and cared for children in exchange for room and board. She dropped out of high school and became a vagabond, “going around singing and playing the guitar,” she told The Los Angeles Times in 1986. Her husband said that she never took an art class.

She married a jazz musician, Robert Burch, when she was 19 and was the divorced mother of a son and daughter by the time she was 20. When she was pregnant with her second child, her son Jay, she was arrested for stealing a piece of meat from a supermarket, The San Francisco Chronicle reported in 2000; someone had told her she should be eating more protein.

In addition to receiving welfare payments, she supported the children by making jewelry at her kitchen table in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco and selling it on the street from tackle boxes. Some local stores began stocking her creations, and Forbes reported that an Indian businessman, Shashi Singapuri, took samples to China. The Chinese were intrigued enough to invite her to China in 1971.

There she discovered cloisonné, a kind of enamel work, which has sectioned-off brightly colored areas of enamel that form a larger pattern. She made a dozen paintings and had the designs made into earrings. Mr. Singapuri put up some money, and manufacturing began. The brightly colorful jewelry was the beginning of her signature look, with cloisonné patterns showing up in many other media, including fabric.

She went on to work on cast metals and wood and to include spinoff products on paper, porcelain and fabric.

She pointedly ignored fashion trends, saying her goal was a look that appealed to shy people as well as bold, eccentric ones. As countless kitchen shelves attest, thousands upon thousands of cat lovers treasure her feline coffee mugs.

After splitting with Mr. Singapuri, she started Laurel Burch Inc. in 1979, with full control as president and chief designer. By the mid-1990s she found herself devoting 80 percent of her time and energy to business matters. In order to return to art, she licensed her designs to a dozen companies that make and distribute them around the world.

Her second marriage, to Jack Holton, ended in divorce. In addition to her current husband, she is survived by her daughter, Aarin; her son, Jay; and two granddaughters.

In Ms. Burch’s last years her bone disease worsened. She learned to paint left-handed after breaking her right arm in 2005. Still, she told The Independent Journal that if she had to choose between good health and her artistic gifts, she would choose her art — “in a second, in a heartbeat.”

In her last artworks she sometimes included words. One quoted an American Indian proverb: “The soul would have no rainbow if the eyes had no tears.”
Source: nytimes

Gold, Jewelry Market In Recession

Tehran MP said that national gold and jewelry industry is in a recession.

Hamidreza Katouzian explained that neighboring counties such as Turkey and Persian Gulf Arab states have made huge investments in the sector, ISNA reported.

Turkey makes high profits by exporting to Iran, he said. This is while the industry has received less consideration in Iran, he added.

The lawmaker urged the government to support the industry by providing facilities to industrialist and raftsmen who are in need of machineries, equipment and raw materials. He proposed that high tariff should be imposed on imported gold and jewels to boost the growth of domestic industry. Also, raw materials and machineries required by the gold and jewelry craftsmen should be imported at low tariffs, he contended.
Source: iran-daily

Sep 20, 2007

World Jewelry Center Gains FTZ Status


World Jewelry Center

The planned one-million-sf World Jewelry Center here is now officially a Foreign Trade Zone. The designation, which means significant savings for major jewelry industry players, enhances the center’s appeal as a place from which to operate, making the 60-story tower more likely to be completed as planned.

Trade and customs consultant Tommy Berry, owner of PointTrade Services tells GlobeSt.com that being an FTZ means jewelry makers can import raw goods into to the building and then add value in cooperation with other tenants in the building without paying duties. After that, the product may be exported back out of the US without paying any duties at all or may enter US commerce at a reduced duty rate.

“We have been counting on approval of the FTZ…,” says WJC managing director Bill Boyajian, a former president of the Gemological Institute of America.

Berry adds that the FTZ also will allow companies to save on the administrative costs of importing by not having to pay merchandise processing fees or user fees and not having to pay a broker per shipment. Finally, due to the tremendous amount of intermodal freight that goes in and out of Las Vegas, the industry also will be able to save on freight rates.

“With the building, housing, manufacturing and processing facilities, the Foreign Trade Zone opens up all kinds of legal opportunities for having lower duty rates,” says Berry, who has been acting as a consultant to the WJC. “There are hundreds of saving ideas in general as an FTZ, but this will be a pretty neat application for it.”

The Foreign Trade Zone will be operated by the Nevada International Trade Corp. on behalf of the WJC.

The developer of World Jewelry Center is Robert Zarnegin, president of Heritage-Nevada and Probity International Corp., a Beverly Hills, CA-based development firm. His exclusive negotiating agreement with the city called for the project to have accumulated letters of intent to acquire 25% of the planned 800,000 sf of commercial condominium space in a 60-story tower that would anchor the development.

As of last month, approximately 100 jewelry-related companies from 15 different countries have signed LOIs for approximately 32% of the tower. The city and the developer are now negotiating a disposition and development agreement that is expected to go before the city council for approval at the start of 2008.

“We had very aggressive pricing for the first 10 companies and then we have obviously created a lot of publicity and have ratcheted up the price slowly and consistently such that the price is now $800 per sf and will stay that way for a while,” Boyajian told GlobeSt.com in August. “The phone is not ringing off the hook, but interest has been very consistent.”

The development site is located near South Grand Central Parkway, W. Charleston Boulevard and Interstate 15. Current plans call for the commercial condominium space in the 60-story tower to be topped by approximately 80 luxury residential condominiums. Adjacent to the base of the tower would be a three-level, 125,000-sf public retail center filled with retail jewelry shops, a gem museum and a café.

Per the negotiating agreement, Boyajian says Zarnegin has submitted a draft disposition and development agreement that the city is now reviewing. The city council is scheduled to vote on the final DDA on Jan. 2. The tentative development timeline calls for site work to begin in 2008. Project completion is slated for mid-2010.
Source: globest

Three Jewelry Designers from London Fashion Week

LargeNightshadeanddeathbychocolate.jpg Walnutnightshadeleaves2.jpg poisonhemlockbracelet.jpg

Walking around the accessories section of the London Fashion Week show over the last few days, a noticeable trend of delicate jewelery caught our attention. With long chains, floating butterflies, intricately wrought wood and metal, beautiful combinations of materials and ethereal detailing, each piece seemed to have a romantic story of its own, as though they were born from fairytales.


Known for her wonderful combinations of words and imagery, this season of British designer Amy Anderson's Comfort Station line explores the concept of poison. Anderson embraces an ornate Victorian style with darkly beautiful lockets, chains and laser-cut wood. Look closely at the gothic pieces and you'll find recipes for death by chocolate and botanical illustrations of poison hemlock and deadly nightshade.


Butterflyring.jpg Butterflychain.jpg Hummingbirdnecklace.jpg

Clara Francis shows a lighter side of the fairytale with her extraordinarily detailed beaded jewelery. Butterflies, hummingbirds and flowers sit delicately on large hoop earrings and fine chains with color variations so subtle more that five different colored beads make up one wing of a butterfly. Made using glass beads, all the work is done by hand in Francis' London workshop. David Lupton's charming illustrations beautifully compliment her jewelery on her website.


lafiole.jpg lailebracelet.jpg

Using laser-cut brass, Parisian designer Eva Gozlan creates feathers, wings, flowers and dragonflies that float on the end of long chains. We particularly loved the small glass jar pendant holding tiny butterflies inside that look as though they will flutter away if you open the lid.
Source: coolhunting

Effective Jewelry Selling. The Great Debate.

I just read a very compelling article in one of the diamond industry's monthly magazines.

The article revolves around the question of whether a jewelry store ought to focus on selling what they love (merchandise), or selling what actually sells (even if they personally find it to be distasteful).

art%20of%20selling.jpg

The writer interviews two particular jewelers who have different opinions. Indeed, there is much merit to both.

Here are the two schools of thought in a "nutshell":

1. Love what sells.

When you fall in love with your diamond and jewelry inventory at the expense of paying proper attention to inventory turnover, you will fall into debt or debilitating cash-flow. "Dead inventory" = Dead money, plain and simple. Always look to satisfy the tastes of your customers and not your own.

2. Sell what you love.

When you become passionate about what you sell, you become good at selling. If you love and believe in what you are doing/selling, you will learn the art of closing a sale. Trust your judgements and try to think like a consumer when you purchase items for stock to fill up your jewelry cases.
Source: diamondvues

Jewelry.Com Launches Annual Diamond Promotion

For the third year running, Jewelry.com is celebrating October Is Right Hand Ring Month.

In October 2006, comparable store sales of diamond right hand rings increased by up to 105 percent compared to preceding months as of result of the campaign, the site said.


Suggested retail price for the collection ranges from $349 to $1,599. Last year, the campaign attracted more than 6.2 million people to Jewelry.com.


The program is supported by print ads, retail promotions and two online sweepstakes. Print promotions include a four-page advertorial in Glamour magazine.
Source: idexonline

Need jewelry? She'll hammer it out

Fifteen minutes is all it takes artisan and goldsmith Beth Lee Stern to turn a thin piece of sterling silver wire into an intricate bracelet.









Beth Lee Stern of Monticello shapes and polishes a bracelet she made Wednesday at Farm Technology Days. The three-day event, which is expected to draw about 75,000 visitors, concludes today at Plain View Stock Farm near Albany.
Times photo: Brenda Steurer




Stern, of Monticello, amazed onlookers Wednesday in the Arts and Crafts Tent at Wisconsin Farm Technology Days with her jewelry making and fine wire work.


In less than 15 minutes of bending, buffing and polishing, Stern handcrafted a one-of-a-kind piece of jewelry.


Her showcase displays reveal her talent runs far beyond one demonstration. Stern works with all metals and with natural stone. "Everything," she said, "from diamonds to gravel."


One of Stern's favorite pieces is a bracelet featuring a simple stone she found. After cleaning and polishing it, she was surprised to find that it revealed the famous face in "The Scream," an expressionist painting by Norwegian artist Edvard Munch. She fashioned an etched bracelet around the stone to resemble the painting.


"The Scream" bracelet is part of Stern's line of poetry bracelets. Available in various styles, each has a poem engraved along the inside of the band.


As Stern demonstrated her technique for making wire bracelets, she laughed and talked with people, who had gathered at her booth about her life and her craft.


"I love living in Wisconsin," she told them, as she made a tight loop at one end of the wire using a pair of pliers. "I love living in Monticello."


And then, with her bare hands, Stern coaxes the wire into a series of graceful winds and curves and, sometimes, even a "loop d'loop." She holds it up for them to see and smiles. They catch their breath.


Stern's professional career in jewelry making began 25 years ago, when she was in college, when Bodacious Creations carried her line of jewelry. Now she attends events like Farm Technology Days and competitive art shows.


She does no advertising; her notoriety is by word of mouth only.


"I don't want to be always answering the phone and telling people, 'No, I don't size rings; no I don't change watch batteries,'" Stern said.


Her studio is tucked discreetly behind a hair salon in Monticello. Stern said she likes it that way.


"I don't want to be famous," she said. "I want my kids to know who I am. I want to make enough to pay the bills, but nothing to be wealthy."


Her jewelry, however, has been sold, as Stern likes to put it, "from Alaska to Arizona."


With a small hammer, she pounds the new bracelet against an anvil, shaping it into its final form, comfortable for wearing against any wrist. With a small pliers, she bends the other end of the new bracelet into a hook and shows the viewers how she fashioned the clasp. They look amazed.


The mechanism showed simple elegance. It reflected Stern's philosophy about jewelry and life.


"Jewelry should be used to commemorate something in your life," she said. "It's not to be used for anything but good.


"I've never met anyone who died from a lack of jewelry."


Customer slips away with jewelry in Athens

Hobbs Jewelers' surveillance camera captured images of a man that allegedly stole from the store.

An Athens jewelry store fell victim to a customer Tuesday.

Police Lt. Floyd Johnson said the customer asked to see various pieces of jewelry at Hobbs Jewelers on U.S. 72 at about 12:30 p.m.

During his conversation with a store employee, he said he had a nugget in his vehicle that he might like to have put on one of the pieces.

"He never came back in the store, and when the employees started putting the jewelry back in the case, they noticed two pieces were missing."

Somehow the man managed to swipe a diamond bracelet worth $2,000 and a yellow gold chain worth $400.

The store's surveillance camera captured images of the man. Police hope someone will recognize him and turn him into authorities.

The black male is about 50 years old, 5 feet 10 inches tall and weighs about 225 pounds.

Johnson said no other jewelry store in the area has reported a similar theft.
Source: decaturdaily

Earnings, Sales Shine At Online Jewelry Firm

Blue Nile NILE is rebounding from a pullback to its 10-week moving average and closing in on its all-time high set in early August.


In fact, the stock's Relative Strength line on its weekly chart is already at new highs, ahead of price -- a bullish sign.


The Seattle-based firm is the largest online retailer of certified diamonds and fine jewelry.


Its earnings growth has ranged from 23% to 46% in the past four quarters. Sales ranged from 24% to 34%, well ahead of some traditional jewelry outfits such as Zales ZLC.


Ultimate Software Group ULTI may be forming a new base. Shares have ramped up in the past two sessions, after trading sideways a few weeks.


The stock also found support at its 10-week moving average for the second time since a June 15 breakout.


Ultimate makes software products for human resources tasks, payroll and recruitment.


The company has delivered triple-digit profit growth for four of the past five quarters. Analysts see full-year profit surging 87%.


After-tax margin was 24% in the latest quarter, sharply wider than in preceding periods.
Source: cnn

Sep 18, 2007

Jewelry Channel to shine on DISH Network

The Jewelry Channel Inc. of Austin has reached an agreement to begin airing on the DISH Network nationally.

"Launching The Jewelry Channel on DISH Network Channel 218 furthers our mission to bring competitively priced jewelry to customers nationwide," says Sri Burugapalli, president of the Jewelry Channel.

Jewelry Channel, which began broadcasting earlier this year, sells jewelry to viewers during live programming and also airs short documentaries related to jewelry and the industry.

The channel says its sells hundreds of pieces of jewelry daily. Its programming airs on DirecTV channel 226 and some Time Warner Cable markets, including Channel 285 here in Austin, according to its Web site.

The Jewelry Channel is a wholly owned subsidiary of VGL Group, a public company based in Jaipur, India.

The Dish Network is owned by EchoStar Communications Corp. [Nasdaq: DISH], which also sells satellite TV equipment and related services.

"The Jewelry Channel is a wonderful addition to our current shopping channel line-up," says Michael Kelly, executive vice president of Fixed Satellite Services Business Development for EchoStar. "The convenience of shopping at home is yet another value we deliver to our subscribers."

The Dish Network serves more than 13.6 million satellite TV customers.
Source: bizjournals

It's bare necks, bejeweled ears at Emmys










Eva Longoria in H. Stern's rock crystal and diamond earrings at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards. Dangling earrings, cuff bracelets and statement rings proved victorious at last night's star-studded event.

Most of TV's glamour gals opted for bare necklines at the 59th Primetime Emmy Awards, choosing instead dangling earrings, cuff bracelets and statement rings as their red-carpet accessories du jour.

Ugly Betty's America Ferrera, winner of Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series, kept her neck bare but wore platinum and diamond dangling earrings and rings by Lorraine Schwartz to complement her strapless bright-blue gown. Model and actress Rebecca Romijn, sans neckwear too, chose white enamel, rose-cut diamond and ruby drop earrings by Bochic, and a rock crystal diamond bracelet and 20-carat pink and white diamond ring by Neil Lane. Eva Longoria of Desperate Housewives fame also jumped on the no-necklace bandwagon, opting for H. Stern rock crystal and diamond cobblestone earrings to accent her sparkly Kaufman Franco cocktail dress.

Other major trends at the show included satin gowns, berry hues, high slits and jewels with a serpent motif.











Rebecca Romijn in Bochic's white enamel, rose-cut diamond and ruby drop earrings.

Actress Minnie Driver, in a yellow satin gown by Donna Karan, wore diamond, ruby and pearl dangling earrings and a black bakelite cuff with diamonds and rubies set in 22-karat gold by Bochic. Private Practice star Kate Walsh added diamond and platinum chandelier earrings, platinum, diamond and ruby bracelets, and a platinum and colored-diamond ring by Neil Lane to her red satin Pamela Dennis ensemble. And stars such as Marcia Cross and Queen Latifah sported serpentine diamond bangles. Latifah's bracelet was from Diamond in the Rough's rough "Iceberg" collection, as were her earrings.

Platinum and diamonds, always a red-carpet favorite, were seen on many of Hollywood's hottest men. Emmy Awards' host Ryan Seacrest donned a platinum tie accent by Superfit and platinum cuff links by Hearts On Fire, Steve Carell of The Office wore platinum and diamond cuff links by Neil Lane and Jeremy Piven, winner of Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series for Entourage, chose Chopard's Dual Time Zone watch with diamond bezel and black crocodile band.











Arnold Brant's platinum tuxedo.

Platinum's strong showing even extended into award-show attire. Entertainment Tonight's Mark Steines wore a platinum tuxedo designed by Arnold Brant during a pre-show event. The tuxedo was custom-tailored and hand-sewn with 10 yards of platinum thread, inlayed in the fabric. Brant will now donate the piece to Clothes Off Our Back to help support children's charities. The tuxedo is valued at $25,000.
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

India's Jewelry Exports Climb, Led by Diamond Sales

Exports of jewelry from India, the world's largest producer, climbed 24 percent in the five months ended August as overseas sales of diamonds rose.

Exports reached $7.75 billion, compared with $6.24 billion a year ago, the Gem & Jewellery Export Promotion Council said on its Web site. India shipped gems and jewelry worth $1.87 billion last month compared with $1.43 billion a year earlier.


Gold demand from India almost doubled in the three months ended June 30 to 317.2 tons as faster-than-expected economic expansion and plans to double jewelry exports in the next five years sparked purchases and investment demand.


Diamond exports rose 25 percent to $5.1 billion and jewelry sales gained 24 percent to $2.2 billion in the five months ended August. Sales of gemstones rose 11 percent to $99 million, while shipments of rough diamonds rose 12 percent to $222 million from year ago, the council said.


India's exports of gems and jewelry rose 3 percent to $17 billion in the year ended March from $16.6 billion a year ago, according to council's Web site.
Source: bloomberg

Neckties, jewelry banned for UK doctors


British hospitals are banning neckties, long sleeves and jewelry for doctors — and their traditional white coats — in an effort to stop the spread of deadly hospital-borne infections, according to new rules published Monday.


Hospital dress codes typically urge doctors to look professional, which, for male practitioners, has usually meant wearing a tie. But as concern over hospital-born infections has intensified, doctors are taking a closer look at their clothing.


"Ties are rarely laundered but worn daily," the Department of Health said in a statement. "They perform no beneficial function in patient care and have been shown to be colonized by pathogens."


The new regulations taking effect next year mean an end to doctors' traditional long-sleeved white coats, Health Secretary Alan Johnson said. Fake nails, jewelry and watches, which the department warned could harbor germs, are also out.


Johnson said the "bare below the elbows" dress code would help prevent the spread of Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, the deadly bacteria resistant to nearly every available antibiotic.


Popularly known as a "superbug," MRSA accounts for more than 40 percent of in-hospital blood infections in Britain. Because the bacteria is so hard to kill, health care workers have instead focused on containing its spread through improvements to hospital hygiene.


A 2004 study of doctors' neckties at a New York hospital found nearly half of them carried at least one species of infectious microbe. In 2006, the British Medical Association urged doctors to go without the accessories, calling them "functionless clothing items."


Infection control societies in the U.S. don't recommend similar dress restrictions because there is no strong evidence that health care workers who don't wear ties or jewelry reduce the risk of infection, said Dr. James Steinberg, an Emory University infectious disease specialist.


Steinberg said that doctors and nurses who don't adequately wash their hands pose a far bigger risk to patients and that hand-washing should be the focus of infection control efforts in hospitals.


The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does have guidelines advising doctors and nurses against wearing artificial nails in operating rooms and around high-risk patients. It says there is evidence that health care workers who wear fake nails have more germs on their fingertips both before and after hand-washing than those with natural nails.
Source: yahoo

Missing jewelry returned to owner

E-mail, phone calls and trips to old neighbors' houses culminated in a bag of jewelry left at the Sea-Tac Airport in Seattle being returned to its owners.

Sharyn Evans, a customer service agent for Alaska Airline in Seattle, said she tried for months to reunite the jewelry -- and an album of family photos -- with their owners. She held onto the items beyond the normal 90-day limit because of the sentimental value, the Anchorage, Alaska, Daily News reported Tuesday.

Evans made one last reunion effort: She ran a description of the items in the Anchorage newspaper, hoping someone would recognize them.

Someone did. Mercedes Angerman called her father in Wrangell, a small community where Angerman grew up. He visited the father of Lois Anne Ballard, Angerman's childhood friend, who called his daughter and read the story to her over the phone. The daughter, who lives in Seattle, called Evans and described the contents of the bag that had been missing for about a year.

"It's been an amazing 24 hours," Ballard said.

Evans said she hope someone will recognize a photo of a one-of-a-kind tattoo to return the photo album.
Source: upi

Celebrating Navajo Jewelry Artists

Having always loved the earthy dramatic beauty of Native American jewelry, it is an honor to share these wonderful works of wearable art by Navajo artists such as Jimmy Emerson, Calvin Peterson, and others. Each of the following pieces when purchased are accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity recognizing their true value as hand crafted Native American art.

Native American Kingman Turquoise Sterling Silver Cuff Bracelet by Navajo artist Emerson.
This gorgeous one-of-a-kind handcrafted work of art features a Sterling Silver cuff bracelet embedded with a large cab of stunning, top of the line, sky blue genuine Turquoise with natural markings and colors designed by the Earth. This turquoise stone looks to be from Kingman, Arizona and has been set in a hand made Sterling Silver bezel sweated to a hand made Sterling Silver cuff. Hand twisted Sterling Silver wire and hand stamped designs circle the Turquoise stones and dress the cuff with a high shine. These bracelets average over 1 3/4" in width at the center and will fit a 5" to a 7" wrist. Stamped Sterling and signed J E. The color and matrix of the Turquoise may vary slightly. The choice of stone in a piece of Turquoise jewelry makes a statement about the unique personality of both the artist who makes the piece and the person who wears it.

There are many legends about Turquoise; The Pima consider it to bring good fortune and strength and that it helped overcome illness. The Zuni believe that blue turquoise was male and of the sky and green turquoise was female and of the earth. Pueblo Indians thought that its color was stolen from the sky. In Hopi legend the lizard who travels between the above and the below, excretes turquoise and that the stone can hold back floods. The Apache felt that turquoise on a gun or bow made it shoot straight. The Navajo consider it as good fortune to wear and believe it could appease the Wind Spirit.

Native American 14k Gold Sterling Silver Overlaid Man in the Maze Pendant by Calvin Peterson
This 14k Gold and Sterling Silver pendant features an overlaid Gold on Silver traditional Native American Man in th Maze design. All the silver and gold was hand cut and hand stamped by the artist. This pendant is 2 1/2" long, 1 3/4" wide, and comes with a complimentary chain. Signed by the artist and stamped Sterling and 14k. This pendant can be custom made with the Man in the Maze overlay made from Jeweler's gold or Sterling silver.

Overlay is created by "sweating" or soldering, two pieces of silver together. The top piece contains a design element which is meticulously cut out of silver. The bottom piece is oxidized and often textured to produce a contrasting background. Then carefully filed, buffed, and polished to produce this fine finish.

Turquoise Sterling Silver Ring
Handcrafted out of gleaming, beautifully patterned Sterling silver this ring holds a deftly-cut cabochon of Turquoise. The Turquoise stones are likely Nevada, Boulder Mountain and Bird's Eye and exhibit exceptional hues of navy blue/black, brown, seagreen and teal, which complement the sheen of the silver.

Turquoise has been, since about 200 B.C., extensively used by southwestern U.S Native Americans and by many of the Indian tribes in Mexico. The Native American Jewelry or "Indian style" jewelry with turquoise mounted in or with silver is relatively new. Some believe this style of Jewelry was unknown prior to about 1880, when a white trader persuaded a Navajo craftsman to make turquoise and silver jewelry using coin silver. Prior to this time, the Native Americans had made solid turquoise beads, carvings, and inlaid mosaics. Recently, turquoise has found wide acceptance among people of all walks of life and from many different ethnic groups.
Source: bellaonline

Online retailers building better Web sites

With shoppers becoming more discriminating about how they shop online, Web retailers are fine-tuning site design, adding customer ratings and reviews and boosting cross-channel integration, finds a new Shop.org study released at the research group's annual summit in Las Vegas.

"Today's online shopper is extremely Web-savvy and expects more than ever, forcing retailers to raise the stakes," said Scott Silverman, executive director of Shop.org in a press release issued Tuesday. "Companies are investing in new features that will keep customers coming back, and homepages everywhere are getting a major facelift."

Top priorities for online retailers include fixing Web site design and performance issues, improving the efficiency of online marketing, and enhancing cross-channel integration, according to the 150 retailers surveyed for the second part of The State of Retailing Online 2007, the 10th annual Shop.org study conducted by Forrester Research.

Fixing product detail pages is at the top of online retailers' to-do lists for the next 12 months, the survey found. Some 88 percent of retailers plan to focus on improving product detail page content, with 80 percent adding alternative images, 72 percent incorporating lifestyle photography, and 63 percent integrating customer ratings and reviews onto those pages.

Retailers are also focusing on their homepage content, adding such features as top sellers and "what's new" sections as well as dropdown menus and rollover lists in navigational areas. To differentiate themselves from competitors, online retailers are also making customer service a priority, with 33 percent of companies responding saying they plan to invest more in live chat functions and 53 percent planning to streamline the guest checkout process within the next year.

In 2006, online retailers continued to allocate the bulk of their marketing dollars (51 percent) toward acquiring new customers online and an additional 24 percent to online customer retention programs.

Paid search continued to be the most effective marketing tactic for customer acquisition, and e-mail marketing retained its position as the most effective—and economical—tool for customer retention. Seventy-three percent of retailers e-mail customers about new products, and 51 percent rated the method as very effective, the survey says.

Retailers also understand the value of operating in multiple channels, the survey reveals. Respondents said that 43 percent of catalog customers have also purchased from their company's online store while 35 percent of online customers have also purchased from their company's brick-and-mortar store.

Online retailers reported that in 2006, they dedicated on average 18 percent of their marketing spend to cross-channel sales, up from 13 percent in 2005. Typically, such tactics included direct mail initiatives such as sending out catalogs and e-mails to drive customers to local stores. However, more retailers are wielding print mail as a way to increase online sales. According to the study, 66 percent of retailers weight a catalog's success by how well it increases Web sales.

"The perception that catalogs are a dying breed could not be further from the truth," said Silverman. "For online retailers, catalogs are an incredibly important tool for acquiring new customers and providing current customers with their first look at new products. Retailers understand that many consumers get a catalog in the mail, then buy the item online."

The State of Retailing Online 2007 is currently available to Shop.org members and can also be purchased directly at Shop.org.
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

Sep 16, 2007

WJA’s West Coast Conference Inspires Women

After four successful years in New York, expectations were high for the Women’s Jewelry Association’s first “Women in the Know” West Coast Conference on Sept. 8 in Anaheim, Calif., at the Anaheim Marriot Hotel.


More than one hundred jewelry professionals from around the country and representing all facets of the industry attended the full-day event. And expectations were met—if not exceeded.


“For an inaugural event, it was phenomenal,” said WJA National President, Ann Arnold. “It was so satisfying to see how inspired and excited the attendees were, and the enthusiasm they had at the conference.”


High-profile, successful businesswomen filled the speaker line-up, which focused on business strategies, entrepreneurship, reinventing your career, networking, taking over the family business, and even the healing properties of gemstones.


But for the women there, the conference wasn’t just about inspirational speakers and motivating breakout sessions – it was also about making connections and building friendships.


“The event was great, and the networking opportunities were fabulous,” said Jayne Schultz, sales assistant for the Las Vegas-based World Jewelry Center and a member of the San Diego chapter. “I really enjoyed spending time with my WJA friends, and meeting new and prospective members.”


The first conference was sponsored by Jewelers Mutual Insurance, Platinum Guild International, and the West Coast Jewelry Show.


Opening keynote speaker Margeaux Cvar, chief executive officer of The Cvar Von Habsburg Group, discussed how to recognize and identify growth opportunities for jewelry businesses by thinking outside of the box. She emphasized the importance of creating a unique and sustainable competitive position in the jewelry industry.


“Differentiation is key,” she explained. “You have to make yourself the niche, not compete the same way the big boys do. Take a different route.”


How can you take a different route? By finding successful strategies implemented by companies that are very different in scope, but similar in structure to your business, said Cvar. “Your performance relative to competitors is irrelevant. It just means that you’re all making the same mistakes. Compare yourself to successful companies similar to your own in other industries, and see how they do business.”


Marie Bodman (pictured), president of Breitling USA, spoke about her rise from an administrative assistant to leader of the third-largest watch brand in the world. She attributed her success to persistence, luck, knowing when to ask for help, and choosing valuable employees.


Bodman also stressed the importance of building a jewelry company to be distinct and unique. “In the beginning, Breitling tried to grab every niche possible—from the product, to the way we did business,” said Bodman, who transformed Breitling from a one-person operation to one of the top brands in the industry in just 15 years. “If you’re an independent business, what can you do that big companies can’t do?” An example Bodman gave is one that she uses herself: sending personal letters to very important customers.


The conference took an introspective turn when Pamela Mitchell, CEO of The Reinvention Institute, took the stage. Mitchell explained that in today’s rapidly changing global economy, the ability to recombine your skill set to move between different job functions—and even different industries—is essential. “Reinventing yourself is the new form of job security,” she explained. “The business landscape turns over every 15 years. You have to see where things are going and be prepared to respond in the moment.”


Breakout sessions offered three speakers:


Amy Swift, co-author of Ladies Who Launch: Embracing Entrepreneurship and Creativity as a Lifestyle, discussed how women entrepreneurs can achieve success by using their intuitive capabilities, rather than following conventional business practices.


Judith Billson, founder and director of Medicine Energy Wheel, spoke about the beneficial health properties of dozens of gems, and offered suggestions about making and marketing jewelry using healing stones.


Elsa Martinez Phillips, president and co-owner of Roberto Martinez, Inc., provided tips on how to successfully transition a family business from one generation to the next.


The Conference continued with a “Women of Excellence” panel, featuring past winners of the WJA Awards for Excellence. Moderated by Bill Boyajian, managing director of the World Jewelry Center, the panel included Nancy Brewer, founder, Nancy B. & Company; Bev Hori, vice president, Ben Bridge Jeweler; Kathryn Kimmel, vice president and chief marketing officer, GIA; Caroline Stanley, president/CEO, Red Jewel, Inc.; and Erica Van Pelt, gem photographer. The group answered pointed questions regarding female stereotypes, gave advice on how to market and “brand” oneself, and offered inspirational stories about rising up in their own careers.


The “Women in the Know” West Coast Conference concluded with recognition of WJA’s Shining Stars, who were announced at its New York Conference last March.
Source: jckonline

Gold Jewelry Production +23% in 1H07

Gold jewelry production grew 23 percent in the first half of 2007 as price volatility dropped during the period, precious metals consultancy GFMS reported in the first update of its Gold Survey 2007.

“The consultancy feels a key driver of jewelry’s increase was greater price stability, particularly in the second quarter when price volatility fell to 12 percent from 31 percent one year prior,” GFMS explained.

The survey noted that jewelry demand in India led the surge, rising by nearly 80 percent in the first six months. “Not all was merely a price response as off-take was further aided by robust economic growth,” the consultancy said of the rise in demand in India.

Elsewhere, strong growth in gold jewelry manufacture was realized in the Middle East having increased 17 percent, while East Asia, and particularly China, were also mentioned as high growth areas.

Conversely, western countries experienced declines in jewelry fabrication as Europe battled to contend with overseas competition and a stronger euro which hurt output.

The United States posted a double-digit fall in first half jewelry consumption, “which was important for many countries as it fed through to a 13 percent slide in jewelry imports,” GFMS reported.

Looking ahead, GFMS predicted that global gold jewelry production would continue to grow through the second half of 2007 and could rise by 6 percent year-on-year in the period.

Philip Klapwijk, GFMS’ executive chairman, cautioned however that “the timing and extent of any rally could alter that forecast for jewelry.”
Source: diamonds

Sep 14, 2007

Wanchai jewelry show to offer reward program

Event management company World Trade Fair Ltd. has created a new jewelry show, the September Hong Kong Jewellery Show at Wanchai, to take place from Sept. 23-27 at the Hong Kong Exhibition Centre.

The show aims to introduce innovative exhibition concepts such as a new venue and new ideas, as well as a group of new suppliers such as India's Moon Diamond and Hong Kong's Sky Jewellery Inc.

New product will also be exhibited at the show such as Wisecorp Group (HK) Ltd.'s earrings and pendant set in 18-karat white gold and micro-pavé-set diamonds.

Another highlight of the show will be a buyers' reward program dubbed Frequent Buyer Incentive (F.B.i.). This will offer professional buyers mileage points that can be redeemed for free airfare or hotel accommodations for a future trip to Hong Kong. To earn the mileage, buyers must join the program by visiting the September Hong Kong Jewellery Show at Wanchai, and then visit and source from any of the Hong Kong jewelry exhibitions.

The program was created to further promote Hong Kong jewelry exhibitions to the global jewelry market.
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

Sep 11, 2007

Jewelers Are Drawn to an Already Gilded Avenue

Always a mecca for high-end retailers, Madison Avenue is now attracting a dazzling array of jewelers that are opening new boutiques or occupying larger quarters. Most of the recent burst of development is taking place on a short stretch of the avenue, from 61st through 64th Streets.

The neighborhood is becoming a magnet for jewelers in part because it is already home to luxury retailers like Barneys New York, Chanel, Jimmy Choo and Hermès, industry and real estate professionals say. These stores’ customers, many of whom live nearby, will no doubt be attracted to high-end jewelry stores.

Six jewelers are opening shops on this three-block stretch.

Two of them — Ivanka Trump, a venture by and named for the older daughter of Donald Trump, and Kwiat Diamonds, a wholesaler — are opening their first stores anywhere.

Leviev, an Israeli diamond trader that entered the retail business for the first time last year in London, is opening its first United States boutique. Kentshire, a dealer in antique jewelry and furniture, will sublet space from Leviev.

Two other jewelers — Chopard, the Swiss watch and jewelry dealer, and Graff, the British diamond merchant — are already on Madison Avenue, but they have outgrown their existing quarters and are moving to larger spaces.

And Asprey, the British seller of jewelry and other luxury goods, has moved farther north, to a new, albeit smaller, store at 853 Madison Avenue, between 70th and 71st Streets.

These are among about 50 jewelry specialists on Madison Avenue within its Business Improvement District, which runs from 57th Street to 86th Street.

Stephen Russell, a dealer in antique, estate and contemporary jewelry, is moving next month from a 600-square-foot store at 962 Madison Avenue to an 1,100-square-foot shop four doors away at 970 Madison Avenue, on the southwest corner of 76th Street.

Madison Avenue offers many attractions. The stretch has “shop upon shop for affluent luxury shoppers, with international hotels and culture nearby,” said Karen Bellantoni, a senior vice president of Robert K. Futterman & Associates, the brokerage company. The town houses there, she said, “give jewelers the ability to showcase their brand, versus being part of the office landscape” on Fifth Avenue.

The avenue also gives retailers with smaller space requirements “the ability to do the jewel-box effect,” Ms. Bellantoni said. “It’s hard to find 1,000 or 2,000 square feet on Fifth Avenue” — most store spaces there are larger.

Although Fifth Avenue is home to famous jewelry names like Tiffany and Harry Winston, shoppers there differ from those on Madison Avenue, Ms. Bellantoni said. “People come from across the country, stay in Times Square, shop on Fifth Avenue,” she said. “It’s not the same customer who goes over to Madison Avenue.”

Another plus is Madison Avenue’s wealthy local market, said Michele Heary, managing director of Asprey U.S.A. “We’re within walking distance of our customers’ homes, so it is a good opportunity to service all their gift needs,” she said.

Ms. Trump, principal of Ivanka Trump and vice president for real estate development and acquisitions for the Trump Organization, opened her shop on Monday, in partnership with the Dynamic Diamond Corporation, a wholesaler. The store occupies 1,200 square feet at 683 Madison Avenue, between 61st and 62nd Streets.

Leviev is to open a 4,000-square-foot shop at 700 Madison Avenue, between 62nd and 63rd Streets, next month; it is renting a landmark 1920s building and subleasing some space to other tenants, including Kentshire, whose 3,500-square-foot store will open in November. Leviev’s store will have two selling floors, with décor that combines antiques and contemporary furniture.

Currently at 725 Madison Avenue, Chopard will move next month to 709 Madison Avenue, the former Timberland store at the southeast corner of 63rd Street. Its selling space will increase to 3,500 square feet from 950 square feet, said Marc Hruschka, president and chief executive of Chopard Inc., to accommodate a product range and clientele that have expanded considerably since the jeweler opened its first New York boutique 12 years ago. The store will have two floors of selling space, with 42-inch flat screens to show videos of merchandise and events that Chopard sponsors.

Diagonally across the intersection, at 710 Madison Avenue, will be Graff’s new store, once occupied by Givenchy. This will have selling spaces of 1,400 square feet on the ground floor and 700 square feet on the mezzanine. Graff, which now occupies an 800-square-foot shop at 721 Madison Avenue, is to move into its new quarters next summer.

Kwiat, a family-run wholesaler, decided to open a boutique when it celebrated its 100th anniversary this year. It is to move into Chopard’s current boutique, at 725 Madison Avenue, between 63rd and 64th Streets, early next year. It will sell from both the ground floor and a mezzanine.

Asprey moved into its store, once part of Yves St. Laurent’s Madison Avenue boutique, last April. It has about 3,000 square feet of selling space on the ground floor for jewelry, and 4,500 square feet on the second floor for luxury goods like silver and exotic animal skins.

Shortly after Asprey was bought by United States asset management companies in 2006, it vacated its 20,000-square-foot, three-floor store in Trump Tower, where it had been a tenant since 1983. Ms. Heary called the new location “very warm, not so much like a museum.”

All of the jewelers said they were glad to be close to their competitors, a situation that Ralph Destino, chairman of the Gemological Institute of America, also deemed beneficial.

Mr. Destino, who opened a Madison Avenue offshoot of Cartier’s Fifth Avenue store about 15 years ago when he ran the jeweler’s American operation, said: “The best location for a jeweler is right next to a jeweler. Clustering tends to focus consumers on the category; it leads to commercial success for everyone.”
Source: nytimes

Jewelry leaders to form crime-prevention networks










From left, front row: JA Chairman John Green, Jewelers Mutual Chairperson Patti Geolat, JSA Chairman David Cornstein. Back row: JA President Matthew Runci, Jewelers Mutual President and CEO Darin Kath and JSA President John Kennedy.

A team of industry organizations led by the Jewelers' Security Alliance (JSA) and including Jewelers of America (JA) and Jewelers Mutual Insurance Co. will develop local crime-prevention networks of jewelers and police.

Under the initiative, local crime-fighting groups will be organized in towns, cities, counties and states throughout the United States. Members of these networks will share information on crimes, suspects and crime-prevention measures and will work with their local police and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to reduce crime against jewelers. The goal is to have 200 networks up within three years.

JA and Jewelers Mutual each pledged $300,000 to the project. JCK/Reed Exhibition Companies provided seed money through a $100,000 JCK Industry Fund grant to the JSA in 2006. The JSA is conducting a fund-raising campaign for the project in conjunction with the celebration of its 125th anniversary in 2008. Partners and contributors will be recognized at JSA's gala anniversary luncheon scheduled for Jan. 12 at the Rainbow Room in Rockefeller Center. FBI Director Robert S. Mueller is scheduled to speak at the event.

"There are currently a few pioneering examples of local crime-prevention networks in the United States that have made great progress in reducing crime in their areas," JSA President John Kennedy said in a statement. "Local jewelry crime-prevention networks lead to more arrests of jewelry criminals, more awareness of security issues by jewelers, better cooperation by police and a significant reduction in crime. This project will be a giant step in the fight against jewelry crime by helping to involve jewelers and police throughout the United States in the most effective crime-prevention activities."

JA Board Chairman John Green said security is a top concern to all retail jewelers.

"JSA's grassroots effort to feed and nurture local crime-prevention networks is a project that Jewelers of America feels could have a significant impact on each and every one of our 11,000 member stores. We're delighted to support JSA in this worthy endeavor," he said.

Patti Geolat, chairperson of the Jewelers Mutual Insurance Co. board, noted that she's seen first-hand how such groups can work, as she's been involved with such a group in Dallas over the past several years.

"I think that this project with Jewelers of America and Jewelers' Security Alliance will be a major step in reducing crimes against the policyholders of Jewelers Mutual and the entire jewelry industry," she said.
Source: nationaljewelernetwork

Artist returns to lifelong passion of making jewelry

A chain of events and a lot of faith led Melissa Vaughan on her journey into the world of jewelry making.

Vaughan started her journey early in life. As a child, she painted with her mother and worked with wood with her father. These events would create a foundation for her artistic ventures later on.

Approximately 12 years ago, Vaughan, a new mom, and her husband moved to Vail, Colo., so that he could attend culinary school. While in Vail, she discovered a small bead shop.

“I would go and spend time there,” Vaughan said.

After a year in Colorado, the Vaughan family headed back to Yazoo City. Vaughan took a job teaching at a local elementary school. Even after working all day, she would stay up late designing and creating jewelry.

“It just blossomed from there,” Vaughan said.

“It grew until I had to make a choice between the two.”

Vaughan’s first big showing was at the Canton Flea Market. There, she met a sales representative who would market her jewelry in other cities and states.

Suddenly, Vaughan was in business.

“I was no longer a small cottage industry,” Vaughan said. “I was a manufacturer who needed employees. We would ship things out every day. It became something I had to focus on. I had to stay ahead of the game because fashion is always changing.”

Vaughan soon opened her own boutique in Yazoo City. Named after a statement her grandmother would often make her store — What’s Next — showcased jewelry and other art by Vaughan.

Then, four years ago, the Vaughan family made the decision to move to Natchez. The doors to the boutique closed and the Vaughan family started a new journey in a new town. Relying on her faith in God, she trusted him to show her the correct path to follow. Vaughan briefly returned to teaching elementary school at Cathedral before going back to jewelry making.

“Something called me back to jewelry making,” she said.

With the help of her good friend, Betsy Mosby, Vaughan had a trunk show.

“That opened the doors because people already knew about my jewelry,” Vaughan said.

Although she has not opened a store in Natchez, she works out of the studio beside her home.

“I no longer have to worry about creating the amount of jewelry I had to create before,” Vaughan said.

Along with selling jewelry out of her home, she offers a two-week summer bead camp for kids ages 7-14.

“That has been fun because they are so creative,” Vaughan said.

“I try not to influence them in any way. I just show them what to do, give them the beads and let them be creative.”

This past summer her camp hosted 24 kids.

Vaughan relies on her faith in God to show her the way. Her future, she states, is in his hands.

For now, she is content to continue making jewelry from her home.
Source: natchezdemocrat

Houston Museum Presents Avant-Garde Jewelry

Houston Museum will present avant-garde jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection from September 30, 2007 to January 21, 2008.

In 2002, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, acquired the Helen Williams Drutt Collection of contemporary jewelry. Comprised of 720 pieces of jewelry dating from 1963 to the present, the collection provides a global look at the field. Over 175 artists from 18 different countries are represented in the holdings.

Ornament as Art: Avant-Garde Jewelry from the Helen Williams Drutt Collection fully explores the impact of contemporary jewelry as a global art form. the goal of the exhibition is to broaden the understanding of contemporary jewelry through a multilayered, critical assessment of the history, issues, and most importantly, the jewelry itself. Placed in context with seminal movements in the non-craft art world, the exhibition encourages the appreciation of contemporary jewelry beyond its traditional boundaries without ignoring its roots. Approximately 300 objects, including about 275 pieces of jewelry, 20 drawings and watercolors, and 3 constructions and sculptures are included in the exhibition.

the exhibition begins in the 1960s, when a dramatic shift occurred in how ornament and jewelry were perceived. Breaking with tradition, artists placed their works within larger artistic movements, signaling a period of independence in which concepts and ideas were valued more than precious materials. In Europe, artists such as Claus Bury, Gijs Bakker, Gerd Rothmann, and Emmy van Leersum incorporated alternative materials into their dynamic, often sculptural, pieces. the influence of these avant-garde artists, based in Germany and the Netherlands, on jewelry artists in Europe and particularly America, cannot be overstated. their work in the exhibition includes seminal pieces from this era as well as drawings. American jewelers were exposed to Claus Bury´s jewelry through his Philadelphia lectures in 1973, his teaching at the Rhode island School of Design in 1979, and his visit to the Museum of Modern Art in New York, as well as the Objects to Wear exhibition of Dutch jewelry that toured the United States in 1969.

In America, Stanley Lechtzin´s innovative use of industrial technology made possible the development of organic forms and the fusion of diverse materials, while Albert Paley developed a forged aesthetic that boldly challenged the prevailing traditions. Lechtzin, Paley, and Olaf Skoogfors´s residencies at the Tyler School of Arts and the Philadelphia College of Arts made Philadelphia an early center for progressive jewelry. the jewelry department at RisD also played a vital role by hosting European jewelers for workshops, teaching fellowships, and lectures.

the growing sense of community in the 1970s is captured by examining the importance of university programs, exhibitions such as Objects USA, journals, and the establishment of galleries such as Electrum in London, Galerie am Graben in Vienna, Galerie Ra in Amsterdam and Helen Drutt:Philadelphia. This community accelerated artistic development across geographical lines resulting in a widespread use of plastics, fiber, and other materials throughout the 1980s. it also began to encourage the building of collections by museums and private individuals.

the exhibition continues into the 1980s and 1990s demonstrating the growing maturity of American jewelry, as well as the development of second generation artists abroad. the avant-garde nature of the works, the artist´s sometimes controversial use of scale and form, as well as the reliance on concept and ideas are explored.

the picture shows Peter Chang, Bracelet, 1991, 2002.3684, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Helen Williams Drutt Collection, gift of the Morgan Foundation, Peter Chang. -- http://www.mfah.org/
Source: huliq

Gang Memoir Author Convicted in Robbery

A former gang member could face life in prison for a jewelry heist that resembled robberies he described in a memoir about gang life.

Jurors on Monday found Colton Simpson, 41, guilty of robbery, burglary and grand theft for his role in the March 17, 2003, heist at a department store jewelry counter in Temecula, about 60 miles north of San Diego.


Superior Court Judge F. Paul Dickerson III had permitted Simpson's memoir, "Inside the Crips: Life Inside L.A.'s Most Notorious Gang," to be presented as evidence during the trial, over defense objections.


Simpson faces life in prison under the state's three strikes law because he has previous felony convictions.


Prosecutors said a visit Simpson made to the jewelry counter two days before the robbery was similar to scenes he detailed in the 2005 book, in which he said he started robbing jewelry stores when he turned 14.


"I love doing jewelry licks," Simpson wrote. "It gets so I go in alone, ask to see a Rolex, grab two, dash out the store, turn them around, and have eight thousand dollars stuffed in my pocket."


The judge barred prosecutors from presenting passages from the book relating to Simpson's gang activity, but defense attorney Richard Briones-Colman said even the book's title could have prejudiced them against his client.


"It was obviously damaging that the book came in," said Briones-Colman.


Simpson was accused of being the mastermind and getaway car driver in the heist that netted a single diamond earring. Two unidentified men, who have not been prosecuted, allegedly entered the store and took the earring.


Prosecutor Charles Lockwood declined to comment on the verdict because Simpson has not been sentenced.


Simpson's sentencing was set for Sept. 28. Briones-Colman said he will ask the judge to throw out some of the "strikes" on Simpson's record in an effort to lessen his prison term.
Source: ap

Jewelry Television Falls for Fashion Week

In conjunction with New York Fashion Week, Jewelry Television(TM) will debut its first-ever Fall Fashion Week September 10-14, showcasing the latest jewelry styles. Featured collections include Nature's Elements, Colors of Gold, Designer Drama, Designer Statements and Color Vibe.

"Jewelry Television is strengthening its presence in the fashion marketplace, keeping up with and setting seasonal trends. We are more than an on-air and online shopping portal. Our viewers consistently look to us for fashion inspiration, advice and our quality jewelry at unbelievable prices," explains Natalie Parman, Vice President of Merchandising.


The diverse jewelry collections to be featured during Fall Fashion Week cover the gamut in terms of styles and colors. For example, the Nature's Elements collection will showcase how nature influences fashion in a sophisticated way through gemstones like Tiger's Eye, Smoky Quartz and Turquoise. The Color Vibe collection is all about hue thanks to colorful gemstones and vibrant enhanced gold settings. Diamond Drama highlights the numerous colors of diamonds. Choose from red, blue, green, champagne, chocolate and even black and white diamond collections.


Fall Fashion Week features will be interspersed all week among regular Jewelry Television(TM) programming. Tune in to Jewelry Television(TM) or visit http://www.jtv.com/ to get inspired and shop for fall.
Source: earthtimes

Sep 10, 2007

Jewelry store owner to help other women start in retail

Monica Swidler knows the challenges women face in starting up a new business.

The Carlisle woman wanted to be her own boss since she was a little girl growing up in Santiago, Chile.

Never afraid to express an idea, she used to get in trouble with her supervisors who either took the credit for a good suggestion or asked her to be quiet so as not to be upstaged.

Swidler learned that to be a success in business, a person has to enjoy the challenge of trying to sell something to somebody. “You must like to talk and listen to people.”

Applying the simple principle of buy it for less, sell it for a little more, Swidler started selling jewelry to friends, neighbors and co-workers in Chile before moving to the United States about 15 years ago.

For about a year, she sold merchandise out of her home before opening Magnolia Jewelry store at 728 N. Hanover St. about three years ago. Now Swidler wants to open the door for other women to walk in.

“I have a passion for helping people make their dreams come true,” Swidler says.

Plans are under way to rent out floor space in her building to women who run a business out of their home, but want a more visible location to sell merchandise.

Three tenants have signed up so far for what Swidler calls a small business incubator for women helping women. She anticipates her tenants moving in around mid-September - just in time to take advantage of the holiday shopping season.

Tenants have the flexibility to customize their space which can be set apart by a divider or cubicle wall, Swidler said. She added they would benefit from shared advertising space on the sign out front along with an opportunity to network with other women.

“It's empowering,” Swidler says. “They could use a friend and a place to help them get started.”

Eventually, she hopes to sign five to seven tenants. The one condition Swidler places on tenants is not to have two vendors compete under the same roof offering the same type of merchandise.

Debbie String is owner of the Leaf of Eve clothing boutique and gift shop in Enola. She plans to open a second location at the small business incubator to move her product line closer to her Carlisle-area clients.

String thinks it is a good opportunity for her to offer advice to other women working to start a business. Sharing space in the same building will draw more customers to all the tenants.

Swidler wants to have a play area set aside for children while parents shop. There are also plans to bring in two instructors who can teach customers how to make their own jewelry using high-end beads of precious metals and gemstones.

Swidler is going to expand her product line to include jewelry designers from her native continent of South America. Her goal is to support them while offering her customers more of a variety of upscale merchandise.

“It's a big jump for me - a step above in quality,” Swidler says. “It's all about support. The more you give, the more you get but you do not give to get something in exchange.”

Swidler meet recently with representatives from the Project SHARE food bank in Carlisle and advocates for victims of domestic violence to discuss how to help struggling women rent a booth at the incubator for minimal rent.

Project SHARE executive director Elaine Livas said, conceptually, it is a great idea and she applauds Swidler's efforts. “She is obviously a woman of vision and a woman with a heart for other women who are struggling.

“We have yet to figure how Project SHARE is going to fit in with this,” Livas said. “We do have some women who have a talent and can put it to work, but most of them face obstacles before they can get to that point.”

Livas suggested Swidler taking some women “under her wing” in her effort to help them get started in business.
Source: cumberlink