What is New at The Pearl Girls? We are busy planning new collections,
new classes and other fun events! We have so many fun things planned.
First and foremost, we are so excited about the beginning of The Georgia
Bulldogs football season that we got crafty with black and red jewelry.
Our apologies to other teams. We are just launching our Game Day
collection with red and black. We might expand on down the road but for
now, red and black is all we need! Go dawns!
In other exciting news, we are now offering pearl rings! These are not
online yet but should be ready in October. These rings are custom
designed and made-to-order and only $99. We are so excited to be working
with talented metal artist, Sylvia Dawe to bring these new designs to
all of you Pearl Girls. Woo hoo! I am already wearing three (what can I
say, I like to layer!). Sylvia has also begun offering new earring
designs, too!
I encourage you, if you get the chance to stop by and see our latest
and greatest in person! We are open Monday through Friday, 10AM to 4PM
and now, on Saturdays, from 10AM to 2PM! Stop by and see us at 548
Hawthorne Ave in Athens.
Some of you may have noticed we started a new round of hiring. We are
especially interested in training people to create our jewelry. Our
next training (and the last one for 2015) begins September 8th! I hope
you can join us and see if you have a passion for knotting pearls and
creating The Pearl Girls jewelry. See more info on our class series here.
And if you just want to have fun and create some Christmas gifts or
other fun pieces, we have lots of fun classes coming up soon! Stay
tuned!
Wednesday, September 23, 2015
8 Gorgeous Jewelry Brand in the World
A great piece of jewelry can totally snazz up a relatively boring outfit. Worried you don’t have the extra cash to invest in some good pieces? Lucky for you we live in a digitial age and lots of great sites are cornering the market on affordable jewelry! Outfit yourself in a great piece from one of these awesome brands. So pull out your favorite white t-shirt and glam things up. Best of all, you won’t be breaking the bank.
Bauble Bar
Truly the mecca of online jewelry, Bauble Bar has an amazing variety of pieces and is constantly having sales and promotions on top of its already great prices. You can spend hours sifting through piece after piece on this site — they offer something for every occasion. We love these gorgeous tassel earrings.
Trend Tribe
In addition to selling really cute pieces, Trend Tribe helps college students get a chance to break into the fashion industry by providing them with the training, tools, and resources to create and execute four fashion events/marketing campaigns on campus each semester. Plus, a portion of each trendsetters trunk show goes to the charity of her choice. It’s a win/win!
Lulus.com
In addition to providing your favorite designer styles at budget friendly prices (this site is a personal favorite!), Lulu’s also has some great jewelry options. Best of all, you can pick up a dress and shoes while you’re there!
J.Crew
When it comes to statement necklaces, J.Crew truly takes the cake. The pieces are a little more expensive than some of the other sites, but worth it because they’re big on style. We love the collaborations with designers including Jennifer Fisher, Catbird, Lulu Frost, and Maya Brenner. Check out the gorgeous Mixed Brulee Pear Necklace. The perfect splurge for a special occasion!
Prima Donna
This fun brand has awesome jewelry pieces along shoes and bags. Plus, if you are a fan of Vanderpump Rules they feature a collection designed by the queen bee herself, Stassi Schroeder.
FashionABLE
With this amazing company you can not only find great jewelry pieces, but also give back. Founded by Barrett and Rachel Ward, the brand’s mission is to help but also empower women (many of them homeless) to overcome addiction and offer them sustainable job opportunities. It started in Ethiopia and has now expanded to Nashville. Perhaps you would like a piece from the Miriam Ring Trio, designed by actress Minka Kelly who is a huge supporter of the brand.
AURate
This one is a little more expensive than the others but if you are looking for real quality and real gold, elegant pieces than it is worth the splurge. AUrate wanted to apply a direct-to-consumer (think Warby Parker meets Everlane) model to the high-end jewelry industry. And for every item sold, they donate a book to an NYC child in need.
Rocksbox
Similar to Birchbox and Stitch Fix, Rocksbox sends you curated packages of designer goodies — this time it is jewelry instead of clothes. For $19 a month you can enjoy and return, or buy anything out of the box at a discounted rate.
Thursday, September 17, 2015
Melanie Brown and Charlene Wittstock with their beautiful earrings
Singer/TV personality Mel B attends the "America's Got Talent" season 10
taping at Radio City Music Hall at Radio City Music Hall on August 12,
2015 in New York City.
Melanie Brown poured her curves into a tight-fitting pale-pink tank dress by House of CB for the 'America's Got Talent' season 10 taping.
Brand: House of CB
Her Serene Highness Princess Charlene of Monaco attends the 2015 Princess Grace Awards Gala With Presenting Sponsor Christian Dior Couture at Monaco Palace on September 5, 2015 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco.
Melanie Brown poured her curves into a tight-fitting pale-pink tank dress by House of CB for the 'America's Got Talent' season 10 taping.
Brand: House of CB
Her Serene Highness Princess Charlene of Monaco attends the 2015 Princess Grace Awards Gala With Presenting Sponsor Christian Dior Couture at Monaco Palace on September 5, 2015 in Monte-Carlo, Monaco.
Primetime Emmy Awards 2015: Jewelry Trend Predictions from Leading Style Expert
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 16, 2015 /PRNewswire/ -- This week Michael O'Connor, celebrity stylist and television personality, will host StyleLab's jewelry event for Primetime Emmy Award nominees, presenters and stylists at a private venue in Los Angeles. Every season, O'Connor curates a selection of one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces from world-renowned designers for celebrities to borrow for the red carpet. From 80-carat diamond necklaces to earrings from natural twig forms and rare Zambian emerald rings, O'Connor will accessorize Hollywood's leading television stars with the most exquisite, highest quality jewelry.
O'Connor forecasts that statement necklaces, colorful earrings and vintage inspired designs will be prevalent at the Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday.
Herewith are details on his red carpet trend predictions:
The Statement Necklace
The necklace is experiencing a major resurgence on the red carpet. For the Emmys, we'll see a variety of styles ranging from the timeless diamond Riviera motif to massive pendants.
Christopher Designs crafted a bold multi-row diamond collar necklace with over 79-carats of white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $327,484. This sparking design would look stunning on Robin Wright.
DAVANI by A&D Gem designed a necklace that features over 93-carats of black diamonds mixed with over 14-carats of round white diamonds connecting to a large black diamond pendant, set in 18k white gold and priced at $75,000. I envision a classic beauty such as Emma Thompson wearing this design.
MASTOLONI reinterprets a classic pearl necklace with its "Signature Collection Limited Edition" style featuring an impressive Tahitian pearl drop artfully blended with brilliant white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $8,800. This bauble would look gorgeous on Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
Pure Grown Diamonds specially designed a tennis necklace with over 20 carats of round diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $59,825. Claire Danes would look like a princess on the red carpet wearing this piece!
Colorful Earrings
We've seen every type of earrings on the red carpet this past year, from ear cuffs and ear jackets to mismatched earrings and long stiletto designs. Celebrities will experiment even further with earring styles by incorporating colorful gems and fun materials.
John Ford's opal earrings are rare and dramatic. They feature four freeform drop black opals (over 8-carats) interspersed with round brilliant cut white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $12,900. Bombshell Christina Hendricks would look breathtaking in this design.
KALLATI™ will debut a pair of delicate drop earrings from their "True Naturals Collection," which include over 3-carats of natural fancy colored diamonds, a unique combination of yellows, pinks, cocoas and greens, set in 18k white gold. Priced at $18,750, these gorgeous gems would look ultra-chic on Lena Headey.
Susan Eisen hand fabricated, one-of-a-kind earrings are made from natural twig forms including watermelon tourmaline slabs gemstones, artfully blended with over 2-carats of diamonds, set in recycled 14k white and yellow gold. Priced at $31,000, these exceptional earrings are meant for a Leading Actress Nominee such as Taraji P. Henson.
Takat's exquisite Zambian emerald drop earrings will stand out at the Emmy Awards. They include over 25-carats of emerald and white diamonds, set in 18k white gold. Priced at $327,297, these opulent works of ear art would look striking on Queen Latifah.
Vintage Inspired Designs
Art Deco and Edwardian inspired jewelry will always remain in vogue, as it has a regal flair and heirloom qualities.
The "Queen" of television Lena Headey would make a statement in Shaftel Diamond Co.'s platinum ring with an 8.29-carat ruby and 4-carats of diamonds, priced at $75,000.
LVE by Schachter custom designed a pair of 17.75-carat diamond chandelier earrings set in 18k white gold and priced at $175,000 along with a complementing 13.46-carat diamond cuff bangle set in 18k white gold and priced at $72,000. These masterpieces would fit perfectly in an episode of "Mad Men" and also on actress Elisabeth Moss at the 2015 Emmys. The LVE diamond collection showcases brilliant, handcrafted diamonds cut to ideal proportions that form the Hearts and Arrows pattern set in a patented unique design that features a symbolic thread, representing life's journey together and the way you live love.
O'Connor forecasts that statement necklaces, colorful earrings and vintage inspired designs will be prevalent at the Primetime Emmy Awards on Sunday.
Herewith are details on his red carpet trend predictions:
The Statement Necklace
The necklace is experiencing a major resurgence on the red carpet. For the Emmys, we'll see a variety of styles ranging from the timeless diamond Riviera motif to massive pendants.
Christopher Designs crafted a bold multi-row diamond collar necklace with over 79-carats of white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $327,484. This sparking design would look stunning on Robin Wright.
DAVANI by A&D Gem designed a necklace that features over 93-carats of black diamonds mixed with over 14-carats of round white diamonds connecting to a large black diamond pendant, set in 18k white gold and priced at $75,000. I envision a classic beauty such as Emma Thompson wearing this design.
MASTOLONI reinterprets a classic pearl necklace with its "Signature Collection Limited Edition" style featuring an impressive Tahitian pearl drop artfully blended with brilliant white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $8,800. This bauble would look gorgeous on Julia Louis-Dreyfus.
Pure Grown Diamonds specially designed a tennis necklace with over 20 carats of round diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $59,825. Claire Danes would look like a princess on the red carpet wearing this piece!
Colorful Earrings
We've seen every type of earrings on the red carpet this past year, from ear cuffs and ear jackets to mismatched earrings and long stiletto designs. Celebrities will experiment even further with earring styles by incorporating colorful gems and fun materials.
John Ford's opal earrings are rare and dramatic. They feature four freeform drop black opals (over 8-carats) interspersed with round brilliant cut white diamonds, set in 18k white gold and priced at $12,900. Bombshell Christina Hendricks would look breathtaking in this design.
KALLATI™ will debut a pair of delicate drop earrings from their "True Naturals Collection," which include over 3-carats of natural fancy colored diamonds, a unique combination of yellows, pinks, cocoas and greens, set in 18k white gold. Priced at $18,750, these gorgeous gems would look ultra-chic on Lena Headey.
Susan Eisen hand fabricated, one-of-a-kind earrings are made from natural twig forms including watermelon tourmaline slabs gemstones, artfully blended with over 2-carats of diamonds, set in recycled 14k white and yellow gold. Priced at $31,000, these exceptional earrings are meant for a Leading Actress Nominee such as Taraji P. Henson.
Takat's exquisite Zambian emerald drop earrings will stand out at the Emmy Awards. They include over 25-carats of emerald and white diamonds, set in 18k white gold. Priced at $327,297, these opulent works of ear art would look striking on Queen Latifah.
Vintage Inspired Designs
Art Deco and Edwardian inspired jewelry will always remain in vogue, as it has a regal flair and heirloom qualities.
The "Queen" of television Lena Headey would make a statement in Shaftel Diamond Co.'s platinum ring with an 8.29-carat ruby and 4-carats of diamonds, priced at $75,000.
LVE by Schachter custom designed a pair of 17.75-carat diamond chandelier earrings set in 18k white gold and priced at $175,000 along with a complementing 13.46-carat diamond cuff bangle set in 18k white gold and priced at $72,000. These masterpieces would fit perfectly in an episode of "Mad Men" and also on actress Elisabeth Moss at the 2015 Emmys. The LVE diamond collection showcases brilliant, handcrafted diamonds cut to ideal proportions that form the Hearts and Arrows pattern set in a patented unique design that features a symbolic thread, representing life's journey together and the way you live love.
Jewelry for Men Is Back in Vogue
LOS ANGELES — Until two years ago, Mike Alt, a software engineer in Boulder, Colo., avoided jewelry for the same reason many men prefer to go unadorned: “Jewelry, especially on men, seemed flashy and gaudy,” he said.
“I never wore anything — not even my wedding ring, which cracked six months after we got married,” Mr. Alt said. “That was 25 years ago.”
Then Mr. Alt received two sentimental gifts from his wife — a palladium pendant in the shape of a lotus leaf, followed by a leather bracelet for his 50th birthday, both designed by Todd Reed, a jeweler who also happened to be a neighbor — and found himself reconsidering his view of men’s jewelry.
“Todd’s stuff captures every aspect of nature,” Mr. Alt said. “He presents it in a way that accentuates the material and not the person.”
Mr. Alt was so impressed with Mr. Reed’s style — the designer is known for his pioneering use of raw diamonds in industrial chic settings — that he asked him to make an anniversary cuff for his wife. When he stopped by Mr. Reed’s flagship store in Boulder, he found himself coveting a $1,500 leather bracelet.
“I put it on and fell in love with it,” he said. “It has a thicker leather band, about three-quarters of an inch wide. It has small diamonds set in it, just enough so you notice them at certain angles. I didn’t want to take it off. I can’t explain why.”
Unlike tattoos, piercings or fashionable clothing, jewelry still provokes deeply ambivalent feelings among men. Images of a casino pit boss draped in gold chains or a used car salesman flashing a ring still echo throughout pop culture, even though trends have clearly moved beyond such caricatures of masculine adornment.
“With the importance of the Internet, street-style photographers, bloggers, Hollywood style and the abundance of red-carpet reporting for men and women, we see men wearing jewelry, and it’s part of our modern psyche,” said Ken Downing, senior vice president and fashion director at the retailer Neiman Marcus. “So it would make sense that a trend that is so visual and visible in the industry would translate at retail.”
Translate it has: Sales of men’s accessories grew 9 percent to $13.6 billion in the 12 months ending May 2014, capping a two-year period that saw the category grow 13 percent over all, according to the market research company NPD Group. The fashion industry is capitalizing on men’s accessories with a frenzy of expansion. In July, the fashion publisher WWD reported that the designer Michael Kors had appointed a new global men’s wear president, charged with building a $1 billion men’s brand.
“Men, in general, have become more image-conscious,” said Maia Adams, co-founder of Adorn Insight, a market research firm in London focused on the jewelry trade. “It’s okay for them to follow fashion, groom themselves, look after their bodies, watch what they eat. Even the vogue for tattooing and piercing has become so mainstream that it’s unsurprising jewelry has become part of that self-expression box of tricks.”
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The appetite for jewelry among millennial males is one oft-cited reason for the surge in interest in the men’s category. “It is well-noted that millennials have grown up in a more ‘accepting’ society, where things such as same-sex marriage and mixed-race relationships no longer turn heads,” Ms. Adams wrote in an email, “so it makes sense that men’s jewelry — once considered rather niche — is now increasingly mainstream.”
Research bears this out. Earlier this year, Noise/The Intelligence Group , a youth-focused marketing agency based in New York, released a report that found that, in a survey of 14- to 34-year-olds, 34 percent of men were willing to pay for a luxury accessory.
The agency’s chief marketing officer, Jamie Gutfreund, said the need to stand out in a demographic as large as Generation Y helped explain a penchant for rare and distinctive luxury items. “Millennials as a generation — there’s two billion of them around the world,” she said. “How will they differentiate themselves?”
There is nothing inherently new about men donning jewels to stand out in a crowd. From the gold chains that adorned ancient Sumerian rulers in Mesopotamia to the elaborate diamond necklaces beloved by India’s maharajas, jewelry was a man’s game from the very beginning — and the more powerful the man, the more sumptuous his ensemble.
“Where it probably splits, like everything else, is the French Revolution,” said Beatrice Behlen, senior curator of fashion and decorative arts at the Museum of London, whose recent “Tomfoolery” exhibit featured photographs of male Londoners wearing jewelry.
After the rise of the bourgeoisie at the end of the 18th century, Ms. Behlen said, came “The Great Masculine Renunciation,” a phenomenon that saw men eschew bright colors and ornamental styles in favor of darker, more utilitarian clothing that underscored their commitment to work over beauty.
“Women are the fragile dolls, and men wear the clothes you can wear to walk around in the city,” Ms. Behlen said. “That doesn’t change again until the Second World War. The next time men are legitimately allowed to wear jewelry, apart from tie pins, is the hippie period — when it was fine to show your feminine side.”
Yet for all the “free love” of the 1960s and ’70s, men who wore jewels still found themselves on the fringe until the culture shifted again in the ’80s. “What is happening that is different?” asked Judith Price, president of the National Jewelry Institute in New York: “Sports and music.”
Ms. Price contends that jewelry for men became socially acceptable again some 25 years ago, when hip-hop stars and famous athletes began to sport heavy gold chains and diamond-encrusted accessories. For a more contemporary style icon, she referred to Prince Harry of Britain, whose taste for wearing stacks of beaded and leather bracelets on his wrist is well documented.
“Everyone wants to be Harry, they want to be a king, a royal,” Ms. Price said. “So they are emulating what sports stars, hip-hop rappers and royals wear.”
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To hear Neiman Marcus’s Mr. Downing tell it, the 29-year-old Prince Harry’s predilection for surfer-style bracelets reflects a truism about men’s jewelry (today, at least): The wrist is a focal point, with the trend reaching across age and income brackets. “A gentleman in a meeting with a pinstriped suit — it’s not unusual to see beads and silver poking out beneath his cuff,” Mr. Downing said.
To people familiar with the market, it is difficult to say which came first: the tide of interest in men’s baubles, or the retail selection to support it.
“When I was a kid, a guy would not walk into a jeweler if not to buy something for a woman,” said Lawrence McCormick, vice president for marketing at William Henry, a maker of pocket knives and men’s luxury accessories based in McMinnville, Ore. “Every time we walked into a jeweler, we felt mostly uncomfortable. Everything around us — the cases, the décor — was designed for a female audience.”
A few years ago, Marie Helene Morrow, president of Grupo Reinhold, the parent company behind a dozen upscale jewelry stores in Puerto Rico, decided to change that. Last November, Ms. Morrow opened Kiyume — the word means male in Swahili — a 650-square-foot men’s boutique in Plaza Las Américas, Puerto Rico’s biggest luxury mall. The store caters to men with an assortment of jewels and personal style tokens — from cufflinks and watches to grilling tools hand-carved from elk antlers.
“I felt so sorry for the men,” Ms. Morrow said. “They’d come to Reinhold — we finally got a little seating area. Most of the time, they’d just read the paper. I felt men were really shortchanged. But I didn’t want to get into men’s suits and shirts. I wanted accessories. I wanted it to be a clubhouse, where men could play cards or dominoes.”
Thanks to the collective push behind men’s jewelry, Ms. Morrow and other retailers now have a wider selection of designers to work with. This fall, for example, Alex Soldier, a Russian master jeweler based in New York, is debuting his first fine jewelry collection for men. It includes Zodiac pendants fashioned from smoky quartz, textured gold cufflinks in the shape of snails, and a $25,000 one-of-a-kind signet ring in 18-karat white, yellow and rose gold, with a 1.27-carat cushion-cut diamond framed by 2.45 carats of rhodolite garnets.
Even jewelry newcomers have felt the inexorable pull to the men’s side. Todd Vladyka and Jim Hinz, the duo behind Editions De Re, a one-year-old line of men’s accessories based in Philadelphia, quit their careers in the medical and art book fields, respectively, to pursue their fascination with jewelry.
“We spent Friday nights getting pizza, drinking beer and sitting around drawing stuff,” Mr. Vladyka said. “Independently, we both took jewelry-making classes because we both love metal. We talked about it and talked about it and we said if we don’t do something about it, it’s going to make us crazy.”
Committed to making “jewelry for the guys who don’t wear jewelry,” as Mr. Vladyka said, they created a set of trapezoid-shaped cufflinks at the behest of their friend Kate Egan, co-owner of Egan Day, a local jewelry boutique.
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“They showed up with 12 drawings and they were really good,” Ms. Egan said. “Straight, gay, every guy who comes into my store wants an Editions De Re belt buckle,” she said. “Men want special things as much as women do — that’s what I’ve noticed.”
At William Henry, the founder and chief designer, Matt Conable, introduced in July his first jewelry collection, a tribute to HBO’s “Game of Thrones.” He rendered the series’ mythical universe in offbeat materials, such as fossilized mammoth ivory and Damascus steel.
“It’s the largest product investment we’ve ever made,” Mr. McCormick said of the 65-piece collection.
Mr. Reed, the designer from Colorado, is equally committed to the men’s category. In June, at the Couture show in Las Vegas, he unveiled his first full-blown men’s jewelry collection, including belt buckles, stitched leather bracelets and a black jade ring with black diamonds that he described as “the sexiest thing” he has ever made.
“We have an advertising budget for men, we have P.R.,” Mr. Reed said. “We were always making men’s, but it was always one-offs. It never got the energy from a business perspective.”
The strength of the men’s business was one of the chief reasons Mr. Reed chose Los Angeles for the location of his second flagship store, which opened this month on hipper-than-thou Abbot Kinney Boulevard in Venice Beach. “For me, L.A. has always been a very men-centric city,” he said. “I wanted to focus on the celebrity sphere, custom work and the men’s side — and they all co-mingle.”
Even stalwarts of the women’s jewelry design scene are edging their way into the men’s arena. After years of hemming and hawing, the jeweler Solange Azagury-Partridge, based in London, introduced Alpha, her first men’s collection, in June. Priced from about 2,000-10,000 pounds, or $3,200 to $16,500, the line reflects the designer’s cheeky sensibility. It includes a “Ball and Chain” pendant in sterling silver and a “Caveman” ring in blackened yellow gold that resembles a miniaturized skull and teeth.
For all the hoopla over men’s jewelry, however, it seems that the Great Masculine Renunciation — when society deemed that a real man could no longer be bejeweled — has cast a long shadow across the ages.
“I don’t like a guy who is too adorned,” Ms. Azagury-Partridge confessed. “My criteria is, Would this guy still be attractive to me if he was wearing this jewelry, or would he make me feel ill?”
Favorite sweet styling, the heart shaped jewelry
In daily life, heart-shaped everywhere. Why are there so many people
like this style, because the heart represents our love. Many times when
we can not language to express our feelings, this time on behalf of all
the heart-shaped discourse.
Such as, in the jewelry industry, designers have devised a variety of heart-shaped style, we can give each other heart shaped jewelry to express his / her most sincere love. Nothing is more suitable than the heartshaped jewelry given to him / her, take a look at these jewels, you might choose one to give your lover.
Add Temperament Tips, Diamond Stud Earrings are the Best Choice
If you want to give yourself add a hint of temperament and cold feeling in a hot summer which, certainly the best jewelry with diamond earrings. Under the sunshine diamond stud earrings very shine, shot from the side will bring you more refined and radiant. On various occasions the Evening dinner, business, party, sports, etc., can also attract a lot of attention.
So, there must be have serveral suitable diamond earrings in our jewelry box.
Recommended diamond earrings image:
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