Showing posts with label necklaces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label necklaces. Show all posts

letters

1 // 2

Yeah, I was that girl. The one that wanted a nameplate necklace. The one that wore ghetto gold jewellery for fun and never took her treasured bits and pieces off. Well, since I never got my nameplate necklace (although I did get some treasured bits and pieces) I feel like now is as good a time as any to indulge. I love the PetiteGrand custom collection, just in time for christmas gifting, where you can get a classic gold chain, or bracelet, or drop earrings adorned with your initials. And, as someone with two first initials, this is the perfect chance to fulfill all those childhood desires for name necklaces that didn't just have H or R on them, but both.

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work



This is the ultimate work outfit. Some fitted trousers, an oversize, tunic sweater, hair pulled back and a long necklace with a pendant you can fiddle with absent-mindedly as you make serious decisions about important stuff. Still searching for the kind of perfect pendants that Ashley has.

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something for the weekend


If only all weekends looked like this. 

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go for gold


1,2 - Jeana Sohn // 3 - Ilana Kohn // 4 - Childhood flames // 5 - me

Public service announcement. I am never, ever, ever going to get tired of delicate bits of gold jewellery. I balance it all out with my blingin' watch, but in truth I love little things the best. Little rings, worn doubled up above the knuckle or jammed against the hand, tiny and simple and true. A little bit of a bitch to take off when you wash your hands, but I made this bed and all that. Little bracelets, layered against each other, one, two and three. Little necklaces with tiny little gemstone flower pendants. And little anklets, just because if you're going to serve cake you might as well ice it. I must be such a girl, because nothing makes me quite as happy as jewellery.

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footloose

I love sandals. I really do. And now that the sun is shining - even if it does get a little chilly underfoot in the evening - I'm breaking out my favourites in all their glory. I've got my k.jacques ones out from their dusty boxes, unearthed my old favourite A.P.C and Benah pairs and have just unwrapped a brand new pair from Cali and Cale that I can't wait to wear. There's something about sandals that make me so, so happy. Just by wearing them. They're easy and simple and they go with everything. In Spring - and these brief moments at the end of August that are slowly but surely starting to warm up - I love nothing more than wearing a typically winter outfit; cosy jumper, baggy chinos, maybe even a cashmiracle wrap, with a pair of strappy leather sandals. I've been wearing them for the past few days and, barring some freak weather aberration, I don't see myself stopping anytime soon. 







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In the studio - Petite Grand



It’s not often that you go to an interview and feel like you learnt more about yourself than you did about your subject. This is, of course, due to the inherent artifice of the interview process. You are meant to probe around the surface and find out as much as you can about the person without being intimidating or rude. You are meant to steer all conversation away from yourself. And, in the course, you are meant to make yourself almost invisible. That’s what you’re taught a good interviewer does, and that’s what you try and do. As much as possible. And, on the whole, interview subjects are quite happy to let you do just that. 

Not so with Tanja Kovacevic. Not because she has nothing to say about herself and her successful jewellery label, Petite Grand. Its accomplishment in only a few short years is a testament not only to the void in the Australian market for high-quality and affordable pieces of jewellery but also to Kovacevic’s unique vision for the kinds of talismanic, charm-like bits and pieces of silver and gold that you never want to take off. There’s plenty to say on that front. But she doesn’t want to talk about it, not yet anyway. In fact, she’s more curious about what Talisa and I are going to do with our lives when we finish university. 

 “I’m so excited for you girls,” she says, sipping tea at her dining room table. “You’ve got the whole world ahead of you!”



 It’s the kind of thing we had both been longing for someone to say to us, as we muddled through a variety of different internships and freelance gigs trying to find our way. And there, in a sun-drenched, airy apartment overlooking that multi-million dollar view of the harbour one long winter afternoon someone had said it to us as if it was the most natural thing in the world. “We’ve all got something in us, we’re all creative, we all have our different outlets,” Kovacevic muses. “I think that a lot of people struggle with that and can be quite confused. It’s not easy to find your calling but you can, and you will.” 

Kovacevic’s calling is to make jewellery. She knew that she would work in fashion from primary school, when she would make sketches and illustrations in her free time. After school she worked for a variety of different brands and companies before she settled in for the long term at swimwear giant Zimmermann. “Only about two months after I started,” Kovacevic says, “Simone [Zimmermann] said to me, ‘we need an accessories buyer for the stores’. I said, ‘I’ve never done it’ and she said, ‘I can see you love jewellery.” Kovacevic laughs. “I’d just come back from living in London, and I was wearing big crazy wooden earrings and all that kind of stuff. It was the London style!” So she started working in buying and development for accessories and stumbled upon something that she truly loved. “Simone saw it in me first before anyone else did,” she says.


After another stint in London, Kovacevic returned to Sydney and began making some jewellery for herself to wear. “It’s that typical story,” she says, “but I thought, I wanted to do something that I would want to wear myself.” That meant simple trinkets of fine, delicate jewellery that was totally in tune with her laidback, completely unforced style. “I want to be able to run around and feel comfortable in whatever I wear,” she says. Today she is wearing a plain sweater tucked into high-waisted jeans and comfortable ankle boots. It’s an effortless style that suits her no-nonsense manner to a tee. “Everyday I just put this on and I forget about it,” she fiddles with a pair of bracelets hanging low on her wrist. One has a leather strap connecting two thin gold chains, the other is a dainty mish-mash of flaxen-hued bit of metal. “You choose it, you put it on, that’s it.” Simple.

Kovacevic is sipping her tea, seemingly saying, enough about me, let’s hear about you. She’s genuinely interested in what we want to do with our lives, with what inspires us, with how we go about in our various avenues of creativity. She gives us advice about career choices (“If you really dislike something, let it go”). She asks us questions about our passions. She wants to know about the woman behind her jewellery. “Everyone’s got a story,” she says. 

It’s this positive outlook that has enabled her business to strike a chord in a difficult retail environment. After friends started bugging her for orders she made a full collection, which caught the eyes of buyers from hip boutique Incu and online store My Chameleon. Now, Petite Grand has over 20 stockists around Australia and one in Japan. Kovacevic has a successful online store and a booming wholesale business, and her designs have found their way onto the slender wrists of starlets like Miranda Kerr and Pia Miranda, as well as the type of insouciant ingénues who dress in head-to-toe A.P.C and have breakfast every day at Bird and Bear in Elizabeth Bay.


All this, and yet Kovacevic is still running a one-woman show. “Yes, I am the designer,” she says, “but I’m also the dispatch girl, and the accounts girl!” She reels them off her fingers, laughing. “I was lucky enough to do a bit of everything before I started my label, which was why I felt so ready to start my own company.” It’s easy to forget that small businesses often operate like lone rangers, working out of home or little studios, completely by themselves. Kovacevic concedes that the hardest part is not having anyone to talk to, someone to sound ideas off. Now she has help a few days a week, just to keep up with orders. 

“I’d really like to give the new collection a bit of time and think of wonderful new things – but there’s really not enough time in the day,” Kovacevic says. “As soon as I finish one collection I have to start on the next, and it just goes from there.” Next season sees the designer experimenting with thin, almost graphic wires and a range of anklets. The coloured beads and the charms are still there, but there is a touch of the urban this time around. Maybe it’s those anklets. They’re the kind that Ashley Olsen would wear, doubled up and hanging low over a pair of tassled loafers. “I don’t think that anything I do is reinventing the wheel, but it’s the subtle little things that I add that I know is unique.” Like most women who wear jewellery religiously, Kovacevic fiddles with it almost without thinking. Her hand gingerly touches the flat discs – Petite Grand’s signature – that hang from the clasp of her bracelets. “I don’t think that I need to complicate it. There’s no need to complicate it.”


To the end, Kovacevic insists that it was a completely natural growth. “I still can’t get my head around it, it’s amazing,” she says. “I can’t believe that I am making a living doing something that I am so passionate about.” Talisa and I look at each and the words involuntarily tumble out. It’s the dream. “It is, it is, it is!” Kovacevic exclaims, laughing. “Not a day goes by that I don’t think that I am very blessed.”

Polaroids, collage and watercolour by Talisa Sutton. Collage pictures from Petite Grand SS12, and from The Thinking Tank tumblr here and here. Words by me. 

In the studio: Amy Kaehne
In the studio: BRVTVS
In the studio: Satomi Kawakita

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smalls

"You appeared to read a good deal upon her which was quite invisible to me," I remarked. 

"Not invisible but unnoticed, Watson. You did not know where to look, and so you missed all that was important. I can never bring you to realize the importance of sleeves, the suggestiveness of thumb-nails, or the great issues that may hang from a boot-lace. Now, what did you gather from that woman's appearance? Describe it." 

 "Well, she had a slate-coloured, broad-brimmed straw hat, with a feather of a brickish red. Her jacket was black, with black beads sewn upon it, and a fringe of little black jet ornaments. Her dress was brown, rather darker than coffee colour, with a little purple plush at the neck and sleeves. Her gloves were greyish and were worn through at the right forefinger. Her boots I didn't observe. She had small round, hanging gold ear-rings, and a general air of being fairly well to do in a vulgar, comfortable, easy-going way." 

Sherlock Holmes clapped his hands softly together and chuckled. " 'Pon my word, Watson, you are coming along wonderfully. You have really done very well indeed. It is true that you have missed everything of importance, but you have hit upon the method, and you have a quick eye for colour. Never trust to general impressions, my boy, but concentrate yourself upon details."

Arthur Conan Doyle, A Case of Identity



one. COS lace bra (thanks Talisa!)
two. BRVTVS necklace with three tiny oxidised beads. 
three. Urban outfitters lace bra.
four. small change, left over from Hong Kong.
five. the tiniest whispers of gold, catbird threadbare rings
six. Carine Roitfeld when she was small, from her tome, Irreverent. 

How good is Sherlock? Laying aside the adorable Holmes/Watson bromance - better than in the recent RDJ movies - and even the fact that I am hopelessly sherlocked on Benedict Cumberbatch, it's just a fantastic modern appropriation of what is the quintessential murder mystery narrative. How much do we all owe Sherlock Holmes? Without it, there would be no Law and Order, no NCIS, no Castle. There wouldn't even be street style photographers, yes that's right, the professionals who "never trust to general impressions" and who "concentrate on the details". For all this, we owe a debt of gratitude to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.

I've always liked the small details best. I'm not as good a noticer/listener/general pest as Sherlock, but I am a bit of a people watcher. Just a little. I like to notice small details. Maybe I'm not watching so closely as to notice lacy underwear - but these are two beautiful little bra-lets that I've picked up recently, the first Talisa brought back all the way from Paris for me, the wonderful COS number that I always use in my polyvore sets and another from New York. Some more delicate jewellery - three tiny little beads on a BRVTVS necklace and a few Catbird threadbare rings, still as gorgeous as ever. Those Hong Kong coins are the remnants of my holiday money... where did it all go? Where did it all go? And I love this picture of Carine Roitfeld with her father in Irreverent. I love the way that she describes him, "he wasn't my father, he was a god". That's no small way to talk about someone. The best thing, seriously, the best thing, is when you have just the right words to say what you want to say. A small victory, but a victory nonetheless.

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In the studio: Satomi Kawakita

all photos by me


It started with a thin gold band - small and delicate and fine as a morning in February - dotted here and there with the tiniest of diamonds. "This is the first ring that I made. I had never seen something like this before, where the diamonds are randomnly set across the ring. So I made it and I wore it." 

Jewellery designer Satomi Kawakita is sitting in her studio, cradling a cup of green tea between fingers with rings stacked high like the Empire State building. Her every movement gifts a glimpse of something sparkly and like a magpie I follow each glint - here a ruby, there a black diamond, everywhere a gem stone. "Being a diamond setter I had worked with diamonds, gold and platinum metals every day, but I had never found gold jewellery that I liked. I wanted to make something for myself. Gold and diamonds together are so classic and that's not something that I might wear myself. So I started to make rings. I showed them to my friends and they liked it. Then they started to place orders. I sold one and I made another one. Then I sold two and I made four more new rings. So that was how things grew. Slowly!" 

Looking at her studio now it is hard to believe that only a year ago Kawakita was working from her bedroom late at night and carting boxes of her dainty rings to customers' homes across New York city. But a lot can change in a year. After a popular blog featured her unique engagements rings with hand-cut stones and hammered gold bands Kawakita could not keep up with demand. "Everything kept getting busier and busier ever day. Even my husband started helping me make jewellery when he moved here! I wouldn't have survived the holiday season without his help." Swamped by orders through her online store, Kawakita and her husband worked day and night. "We didn't have a day off from September to December," she says laughing. "I realised that I really have to find someone to help me." 




Hiring an assistant is a big step for this Japanese-born, New York-based designer. Her independence is one of the hallmarks of her label. From the milky cognac diamonds to the wax moulds to the jewellery boxes and online store, Kawakita does everything by herself."It's not healthy working every day for a long time. I like working, but it is too much. You need a balance between staying home and relaxing and working." The balance is slowly tipping, thanks in part to Kawakita's new assistant, hired only two weeks before our interview. But, like all things that are truly important, change is difficult. "I have to learn to hire people and trust people, which is really hard. I have to be patient and I understand that it is not easy. I have made many mistakes at the beginning of my career and I need to know that it is normal to make mistakes." 

One of the striking things about Kawakita's jewellery line is how beautiful her mistakes are. A former glass-blower in Japan, her eye has always been for the unique. "I like to work with small details," she says, nodding. The handmade quality of her pieces have an almost organic air - no two rings are the same, even when they come from the same mould, even when they are cut from the same stone. As wedding and engagement rings they are imbued with the kind personality and integrity that a bride dreams of, as pieces for casual, everyday wear they take on a character that is purely their own. A host of different coloured stones and remarkably stunning diamonds, from the classic to the unusual - maybe a milky grey number or a tiny black diamond, a cult favourite - characterise her range. Necklaces, bracelets and earrings complete Kawakita's canon, but her heart will always be with her first designs. "Rings are what I like to make the most," she says. "I think it is because I don't have to buy the clasps, I can make everything myself from the beginning. They are on such a small scale but there is unlimited possibility."

In keeping with her label's bespoke feel, Kawakita's design processes often begins in the thick of it. She rarely sketches or sets out mood boards, preferring to get straight to carving out designs from wax. Boxes of these litter the studio and there are even more drawers of moulds and samples. Sometimes Kawakita will see a stone that she loves or that intrigues her and the process starts from there. "I often go and check with my stone dealer to see what they have and what's new. If I find something that I like I just buy it. So I have a lot of loose stones waiting for me to design around them!" As her business grows, Kawakita has started to open up her studio to customers who are interested in more custom pieces. "For many of them it is their first time in a studio! They are always asking, what is this tool for, what does this do? Yes, it does look like a dentist's office," she laughs. "I sit down and show them how the tools work and how to set stones. Sometimes the customer is leaning over my shoulder, designing their own ring." This personal contact is one of Kawakita's favourite things, and something that she loses as more and more of her pieces are sold through her stores. "I love talking directly to customers and hearing their stories."




After more than seven years living in the city, Kawakita has found her feet. Her advice for those looking to make it in the big apple is simple. "This is a very honest city," she remarks, "if you work hard and if you love New York, New York will love you back. That's what my friend told me at the very beginning." The contrast to her homeland is striking. "Japan is more traditional," she says. "Here in New York people have their own taste and their own opinions... People are always looking for new thins and this city is so open to the new." 

Simplicity in design is the most difficult attribute to attain - it is easy to follow natural instincts and over-think, especially in the gaudy world of fine jewellery. But there is a reserve and a sense of calmness to Satomi Kawakita which is, ultimately, refreshing. It is not hard to understand why her designs have become so popular. Who wouldn't want an engagement ring that was so personal the very setting itself might have been created just for you? It's a classic and romantic notion, but it is one that has been increasingly lost in the trend-driven world of fashion. As the pendulum swings back, led by the success of taste-makers including Phoebe Philo at Celine and Sofia Coppola, small brands like Satomi Kawakita have found their niche. The only question is, how high will they go?

As the pile of orders grows and the hits on her site steadily increase Kawakita is adamant that she will remain in control. Her nightmare would be having to yield any measure of creative independence to an outside party.  "Some people think that my company is big from what they see on the internet, but it is quite small," Kawakita remarks. "It is growing now. But I don't want it to be too big. I want to keep it the size it is now, where I can control everything myself." Just as with that first ring - the result of that innocent, almost child-like yen to make something because you want to, and you can - Kawakita will continue to make pieces that she would wear herself, that she finds beautiful. Some things really do come full circle.

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This is the first in my series of studio visits during my time in New York, I hope you like it! Satomi Kawakita is one of the most talented jewellery designers I have ever met, and her pieces are so incredibly beautiful it is remarkable. If you have any questions or would like to place an order, contact info@satomikawakita.com


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