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Contemporary handcrafted jewellery made using recycled silver, resin, semi precious beads & gold vermeil.
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Claire Robinson works in gold and silver with precious and semi precious stones. Her primary interest is in surface decoration, inspired by ancient civilisations.
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Claire works in silver and gold embellished with colourful glass beads, bright enamel and precious gemstones.
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Clara Breen works with precious metals and gems, combined with fragments of leaflets, train tickets, maps or colourful paper. Clara's work plays with the notion of a contemporary keepsake. As featured on Radio 4 Woman's Hour.
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Brighton. Silver, brass, wood & gold using acid etching, painted wood & casting. Commissions include for the National Library of Women (panel for Elizabeth Garrett Anderson); Tartan Television Ltd.; The Crafts Council and The British Council. Outlets include Electrum, London, Brewery Arts, Cirencester & Stafford Art Gallery
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Necklaces, bracelets, brooches, earrings and cufflinks in limited editions and one-off pieces. Influenced by handwriting found on old papers; postcards, letters, envelopes and documents. She lives and works in Edinburgh and sells through various galleries across the UK and USA including Contemporary Applied Arts and Flow in London; The Scottish Gallery in Edinburgh; the Harley Gallery in Nottingham; MIMA in Cleveland and the Ruthin Craft Centre in Denbighshire.
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Flora Collingwood-Norris is a designer, maker and mender based in Galashiels. Balancing colourful knitwear and visible mending, Flora champions natural fibres and the skills needed to make your clothing last. With an emphasis on colour inspired by local landscapes, Flora’s designs are made in her studio on hand-powered knitting machines.
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Corrinne is fascinated with the exploration of the heritage technique of flat chainmail. Focusing on utilising a combination of raw recycled precious metal colours and interlocking them in bold and subtle patterns in the construction of a flowing tactile metal textile.
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Italian born artist, based in Edinburgh, Cristina's work explores the contrast between modern buildings and ancient temples and palaces of South Korea. She combines natural and painted wood with precious and non-precious metals.
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Dagmar’s work includes both traditional and contemporary elements, harnessing nostalgic qualities within simplistic modern design. Those traditional qualities spring from her love of Art Nouveau and the world of flowers. Her work draws from these influences and is transformed into intricate, elegant and timeless pieces. Dagmar has been selected to exhibit at a number of prestigious venues including the Victoria and Albert Museum and Goldsmith’s Hall in London.
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