Sunday, April 18, 2010

Ward Kelvin Jewelry Designer


We all read about the well renowned well renowned designers frequently and it is intriguing to get to understand some of the new faces in the luxury industry. Like numerous apparently overnight feelings Ward Kelvin has been conceiving for other titles you will identify directly, for example Tiffany & Co. and Ralph Lauren. He was furthermore the designer behind the much coveted "Golden Compact" assemblage for Estee Lauder. An intriguing tidbit of data, especially for all of you aspiring designers, is that his first job after graduating pattern Pratt organisation was as a plaything designer. Believe it or not, this jewelry designer whose first assemblage was commenced this past November at Bergdorf Goodman in Manhattan one time expended his time conceiving Happy Meals for McDonald's.

Ward remarks that the move from plaything designer to jewelry designer is not as large-scale a extend as one might believe as they both need "ingenuity and a playful imagination". He wants to convey a wit and essence to all of his conceive efforts and honed his abilities employed for others. He has titled his first individual assemblage American Chinoise. The 40 part assemblage is a up to date understanding of the method of the 1930's when all the Hollywood Regency dwellings boasted chinoiserie bamboo and lattice interiors. As glimpsed in the jewelry pictured, there is many of lightweight and airy space in every part and he likes the woman wearing a part to seem "it was conceived effortlessly, by the chicest chinoiserie bird, as if it were conceiving its nest."

The jewelry in the assemblage is fabricated from prized metals for example gold and platinum, prized and semi-precious pebbles encompassing precious gems, peridots, Mali garnets and is home made in New York City. Ward Kelvin's attractive jewelry arrives with a grave cost tag and the Bamboo Cuff shown overhead retails for $20,450. The parts can be discovered at Bergdorf Goodman in New York and this approaching April at Nieman Marcus in San Francisco. As with numerous of the more exclusive jewelry collections you will not find the pieces online but need to call the shops exactly for details.

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