February 28, 2010

Interior Ministry

I've been having an interiors moment of late. Perhaps it's because I finally painted the front room; maybe it's the imminent arrival of a new bathroom suite. Or, it could be down to the recently finished double-glazing-and-flash-new-blinds project that has seen my flat flooded with light – and filled with brawny men – for the first time in years.

Whatever it is, when it comes to inspiration www.theselby.com is my first (and often last) port of call.

So, the fact that in less than 6 days Todd Selby and I will be signing our new books in the same place, at the same time, is beyond exciting! I'm wondering if I should pack a moodboard to get his opinion on the bathroom...



The Selby's new book: The Selby Is In Your Place



Todd Selby and me (almost) in the same place...


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Looking through Todd's site, I just came across these snaps of Yoshiko Kajitani's home. Yoshiko is the founder of Yoshiko Creation Paris, and one of the jewellers I profiled in Fashion Jewellery: Catwalk & Couture. She has created the most amazing piece of jewellery to accompany the book's launch at Colette. It goes on display tomorrow morning so until then, feast your eyes on this...

















All photos: www.theselby.com

Beads, Bibelots and Bling

Bead: a small, usually round object of glass, wood, stone or the like with a hole through it. Often strung with others of its kind in necklaces, rosaries, etc.

Bibelot: a small object of curiosity, beauty, or rarity.

Bling: a term derived from U.S. rap slang to signify wealth and expensive accessories; flashy, ostentatious jewellery; a sound suggestive of the glitter of jewels and precious metals.

Titling book can be a complicated, not to mention fraught, undertaking. Clever puns and smart-arse wording are well and good when conjuring snappy magazine headlines, but when the bottom line’s on the line a book needs a title that will appeal as much to the interested outsider as to an industry veteran.

My first proposal was Beads, Bibelots & Bling, for the (so I thought) succinct way it captured the diversity of designer fashion jewellery. I was quite pleased with the alliteration, too.

My publisher was less keen, saying it sounded like the title of an academic paper.





The lovely Coco's mock-ups for my debut pitch to Laurence King
Nothing like a bit of bondage to break the ice...
Photo: Danilo Giuliani (top)

Other rejects - each with the subhead New Directions in Fashion Jewellery – included:

All That Glitters

To obvious

Fashionable Fakes
Too cheap

Glint

Concern over its similarity to another – less family-friendly – Anglo-saxon word

Flash
Binned for sounding too much like the computer programme. Or an antisocial practise indulged in by men wearing dirty macs…

In the end Mr Laurence King himself made the merciful decision to go with Fashion Jewellery: Catwalk and Couture.

And bibelot went to a good home after all.

D-Day

Having signed up for the signing (and bitten Sarah Colette’s hand off in the process) it was suggested that I invite some of the jewellers profiled in my book to create a one-off piece especially for a Jewellery Corner that Colette are hosting during Paris Fashion Week.
In under 6 weeks, 24 jewellers from around the world have conceived, created and delivered a dazzling collection of pieces, which I will document over the coming week. The work-in-progress photos they’ve emailed me are burning a hole in my hard drive, but given the aforementioned ‘top secret’ nature of the display, I’ll (reluctantly) save them til after the unveiling which takes place in T minus 12 hours exactly.
Suffice to say, I’m bursting with excitement and pride at the enthusiasm with which all involved have taken up the challenge. And even if there have been a few misunderstandings as to the exact meaning of ‘one piece only’, or the flexibility of a ‘not-to-be-missed-deadline’, I think we’ve pulled it off.

February 26, 2010

Fashion Jewellery: Catwalk and Couture

Call me lazy, but for reasons that will be revealed, time is of the essence. Putting my considerable talent for procrastination to good use, I've left it to the last minute to master the art of blogging and get this thing up and running as the undisputed online authority on all things jewellery. Yep, in precisely 1 hour I'll be emailing lots of influential people about a book I've written, and a little launch do I'm having next week, so for this reason – and this reason only – I'm committing the cardinal journalism sin and re-hashing a press release. Even worse - I'm re-hashing a press release I probably helped write, about myself.

Fashion Jewellery is created with the catwalk and couture in mind, and is characterized by its creativity and originality. It is arguably the most exciting field in fashion today.

Arranged by designer, this is the first book to showcase contemporary catwalk and couture jewellery, profiling 33 international fashion jewellers who combine traditional techniques and ultra-modern methods to create this new style of jewellery.

The book features exclusive interviews, never-seen-before sketches and specially commissioned photography. Collaborations with leading fashion designers and brands such as Lanvin, Vivienne Westwood, Alexander McQueen and Comme des Garçons, as well as collections for directional fashion stores such as Colette and 10 Corso Como are all discussed.

Adams believes that the allure of fashion jewellery is the endless scope for re-invention and its applicability to different forms. The sheer range of materials, interpretations, philosophies and – importantly – humour, also make it endlessly fresh and exciting. Showcasing skilled craftsmanship and an often limited-edition approach fashion jewellery harnesses the spirit of couture for the 21st century.

Ahem. Here's some spreads to lighten things up.


Photo: Harold David, Jewellery: Michelle Jank


Photo: Mark Borthwick, Jewellery: Bless


Photos: Florian, Jewellery: Florian


Jewellery: Atelier 11 for AF Vandevorst

Colette Calling

Sometimes the stars align, once in a while fate smiles and – occasionally – things just work out. OK – so I also did a bit of low level stalking when I was in Paris for New Year (notes on napkins left with the staff at Colette etc), and I asked my well-connected friend Coco (Corinne) to pull hard on some strings but, hey, it did the trick.

January 6th – Email from Colette

“Hello

I received your email from Corinne

Of course we'll carry your book, and if you want, if you're in Paris, we can do a book signing in March during Fashion Week. Specially as we'll do a little corner with installations by designers like xxxxxxx, xxxxxx xxxxx, xxxxx xxxxx, xxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxx, xxxx xxxxxxxxxx... •

So let me know what you think...

All the best”

• Names deleted due to current Top Secret Status

You’ll stock my book?!
You’ll organise a book signing, by ME?!
During Paris Fashion Week?!!!!!

Well, if you insist...