Archive for category necklaces

Links of London in Hand

The gifts were a great success, not only with the chefs but also at Harvey Nichols, where Ms Ducas took a few extra pairs one lunchtime. “They liked them links of london,” she says. “But they needed a range, not just one kind. I went back two weeks later with a collection.”

 But life became complicated for the young Ms Ducas. Her mother died suddenly and she inherited the fish business.

 ”I took over the company from one day to the next Links of London Rings, not knowing a cod from a halibut. It was a big learning curve,” she says.

 Around the same time, Ms Ducas and her new husband, John Ayton, began to expand the corporate gift side of the fledgling jewellery business. They had met in Hong Kong, where Mr Ayton was a lawyer. Before long, Links of London Bracelets became a permanent job and Ms Ducas gave up the fish business. Mr Ayton took a full-time role three years ago.

 One of their first customers was Veuve Clicquot, for whom Ms Ducas designed a miniature silver champagne bottle with a cork. By 1995, she was the runner-up for the Veuve Clicquot Business Woman of the Year Award. There has been much public recognition and many coveted prizes and commissions. Links of London Bangles holds the licence for silver giftware from the All England Club, Wimbledon. Last year, the company produced a life-size silver rugby ball for the winners of the Hong Kong Rugby Sevens.

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Some Styles of Tiffany Jewelry

Among international jewelry world, nearly every luxury brand knows what the existence of  Tiffany 1837 I.D. lanyard means to them. It’s not only one of the most meritorious makers in fashion epoch, but also one of the most reputed maintainer of the real theme of fashion. Tiffany is well known for producing fancy pieces of jewelry which are made to a very high standard.
It produces very Tiffany 1837 Lock bracelet which are popular to a great number of people. It always pays much attention to injecting fresh fashion elements to the design of its fancy jewelries, not just to keep its leading position in world fashion industry, but also to satisfy so many modern women’s dream of love and romance, luxury and fantasy.
And in today’s market, some style of Tiffany necklaces are still hot, especially the pieces from Elsa Peretti. Here are some hot jewelry pieces from her.

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Sexual Harassment Case in Tiffany & Co

 Former head of the estate jewelry department at Tiffany & Company was awarded $365,000 by the New York State Division of Human Rights yesterday after she charged she had been sexually harassed by two tiffany bangles sale at the store and then dismissed when she complained.
Lawrence Wizman, a division spokesman, said $300,000 of the award was for mental anguish, the largest such award ever given by the division in a sexual harassment tiffany necklaces sale. The other $65,000 was for back pay and interest in the case, which dates to the early 1980’s.
The ruling also requires Tiffany, the Fifth Avenue jeweler, to provide staff training on sexual harassment and to post the decision in a prominent place in the company’s offices.
In a statement, Tiffany said it would appeal the ruling. It also accused the division of “inexcusable delay” for waiting 10 years before holding any hearings in the case and doing so only after the two managers had died. The tiffany earrings sale also denied that the dismissal of the complainant, Paula Smith, was “based on discriminatory motives.”

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SHOWING HER METAL

Spring sunlight streams through the windows of a showroom eight floors above the bustle of Boylston Street, flickering off displays of beautifully wrought silver, gold, and copper links of london online.

“I must get a blind,” says Lana Barakat as she squints, caught in the sun’s piercing glare. The 31-year-old Lebanese native moved Lazuli, her Links of London Necklace design business, to these lofty and bright new digs across from Copley Square almost a year ago and she’s quite literally having her moment in the sun.

There’s the feature on her jewelry in Lucky magazine’s January issue. There are the upcoming O magazine and Victoria’s Secret catalog boosts. There was the Women’s Wear Daily photo shoot a few weeks ago. And then there was the fact that Lazuli snagged two spots in this month’s issue of Vogue.

“When I first started, my first hit was in Marie Claire,” says Barakat. “I thought, OK, one day my links of london Black And Gold Friendship Bracelet will be in Vogue.” Her smile is undeniably self-satisfied. The cachet of being included in Vogue, she says, “is a career pinnacle.” Not bad for someone who started jewelry making as a hobby while living in Mexico City, where she worked for an advertising agency. Before that, in 1993, Barakat came to Boston from Lebanon to attend Boston University, where she studied advertising and communications.

“I was very creative as a child, but I wanted to study something that would” – she pauses – “have a career path.” (Read: Pay the rent.) In Mexico City, she was introduced to local artisans through her hobby, many of whom she still uses to manufacture her jewelry. “They are like family. I’ve watched their children grow,” she says. A couple of her necklaces incorporate small, handmade Mexican tiles as pendants. After a stint in London, Barakat decided to start her links of london Black & Orange Friendship Bracelet design business. She returned to Boston in 2002 and set up in a back room on Newbury Street.

Vogue featured two of Barakat’s copper cuff bracelets that have a high metallic sheen, a look touted as a summer fashion trend. A couple of years ago, Barakat started using copper alongside gold and silver. She also uses fine braided silk ropes, which have a delicate metallic look. She likes bold splashes of color and off-kilter angles. Crosses – a staple in her work – hang from beads in her summer collection, echoing a rosary. She also uses a Middle Eastern talisman – a hand with an eye in its palm – that protects against the evil eye.

Her men’s range includes geometric cuff links, rings, and bangles. Her rings start at around $45; the 18-carat gold plate “Pebble” cuff, which Oprah Winfrey’s magazine used, is, at $260, one of Lazuli’s more expensive items. Her spring-summer collection features tender coral, cobalt, and pale jade colors.

“People like to change their jewelry with the seasons nowadays, they don’t want to wear the same pieces year after year. So I don’t want it to be expensive,” says Barakat. Stores such as Stil on Newbury carry Lazuli, and Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art just placed an order for its gift shop. Lazuli has a representative in Dallas, too.

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The Way to Links of London

2009 AUG 6 – — Mother. Spouse. Family accountant. links of london These are just some of the many hats women wear – as they struggle to find flexible means of earning income. Now, selling their unwanted jewelry for extra cash, thousands of women have bet their bottom dollar on a company called Golden Girls (see also  Links of London Jewellery.

Reminiscent of the popular 1980s Tupperware parties, the company offers in-home parties as a straightforward alternative to other gold-buying experiences. Since its inception in May 2008, women have been flocking to join the Golden Girls family. Links of London Necklace The company has hired over 130 women and, given their exponential growth, expects to hire 300 more women nationwide by the end of the year.

Now in 19 U.S. markets and Canada, Golden Girls has hit the jackpot with its winning combination of gold and giving. With a philanthropic focus, each gold party benefits an organization selected by the party hostess. In its first nine months, the company gave $100,000 in donations – and since this milestone in February 2009, has more than doubled this amount in half the time. To date, Golden Girls has donated over $230,000 in charitable donations, proving that the company is worth its weight in gold.

“It’s exciting to provide everyday women a flexible way to earn money while giving back,” said Golden Girls co-founder Deanna Brown. links of london I Charm “Finding ways to make a difference for women and their communities is an essential part of our creed.”

By thinking outside the jewelry box, Golden Girls offers an exciting way for women to sell their gold – and enjoy flexible employment – while coming together to give back. The Golden Girls team understands the struggles of the everyday woman – and hopes the company’s continued success will be a wonderful way to say, “Thank you for being a friend.”

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Links of London Here

One issue here is chronology. That is, just when did the bourgeois values supposedly celebrated in Heywood’s Gresham arise? Late in the century, Thomas Fuller described Gresham as “bred a mercer and merchant in the city of London, where God so blessed his endeavours, that he became the wealthiest citizen in England of his age” (465). Here Fuller effaces Gresham’s prominent father and Cambridge education (he was merely “bred a mercer and merchant”), and lauds his wealth as a divine reward-ideas consistent with what Weber and Tawney and their followers and revisers said about the spirit of capitalism and its accompanying new values. Fuller, however, was writing fifty years after Heywood and a hundred after Gresham, links of london sale and charting the emergence of the views Fuller seems to express has involved considerable debate. At one extreme, Links of London Jewellery writers like Alan Macfarlane deny the newness of a commercial ethos: “the majority of ordinary people in England from at least the thirteenth century were rampant individualists, highly mobile both geographically and socially, Links of London Necklace  economically ‘rational/ market-oriented and acquisitive, ego-centered in kinship and social life” (163). Others, however, date a “spirit of capitalism” not earlier, but later: “It simply does not exist in England before 1640,” argue Charles and Katherine George, for example (172). In still other accounts, links of london Raindance Silver Pendant the birth of new values matters less than the survival of old ones, for the medieval roots of early modern attacks on money-making have often been noted (e.g., McLuskie and Dunsworth, 424). This variety of ways to construct an economic past reveals the problematic elements in any attempt to link changing attitudes to signs of early capitalist formation in plays like If You Know Not Me.

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