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Cambridge based Lorraine Hitt is the designer & creator of this modern fashion jewellery brand. Elsiem Jewellery's stylised designs are inspired by simple modern architectural & sculptural forms, with an edge.
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John & Dawn Field create their signature asymmetrical range using, contrasting metals and richly coloured gemstones.
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Gill Forsbrook’s jewellery results from her love of exploring the potential for making in different materials. Using silver alongside brightly coloured aluminium, the current collection consists of readily wearable, eye catching geometric arrangements with a nod to the shapes and forms of architectural detail.
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Roxanne Gilbert hand-crafts bold and sculptural jewellery inspired by the ever-changing sky and sea where she lives in Cornwall. She uses silver, gold and titanium to capture the light, tone and rhythm of the coastline. Her pieces are highly expressive, yet wearable - conveying a quiet strength and a strong sense of place.
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Caitlin Hegney creates handmade silver and wooden jewellery that resonates with the ancient past. She makes her timeless designs from her home studio, in Helensburgh, on the West coast of Scotland.
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Recently graduating from Edinburgh College of Art, Emily is a jeweller, designer and maker who uses the process of enameling to explore colour and pattern. Using the combination of vitreous enamel layered under industrial enamel, Emily creates delicate and asethical jewellery pieces that are inspired by honeycomb and the layers within beehives.
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Botanically Inspired Fine Jewellery
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Born Germany now London-based. Machined & fabricated silver and/or gold-plated brass. Work featured in The Financial Times & European. Exhibitions include Schmuckszene 96, Munich. Outlets include Galerie Ra, Amsterdam.
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Brighton. Silver with semi-precious stones. She makes a range of botanically themed embossed jewellery with 18 carat gold details. Outlets include Studio One Gallery, Edinburgh and Bluecoat Display Centre, Liverpool.
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Guided by the material itself, Kumiko Kihara works with Mitsuro Hikime (an ancient Japanese wax technique) alongside chasing and repoussé. Calligraphy informs her lines and each hammer strike adds emotion. Kumiko attends to ? (Ma), the space within and to shadow, which gives an object its presence. Every piece is a unique, poetic act of making.
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