Looking Back on Friday … Again — Jewelry Part One

I am having a ball going back through all of my Sunday Evening Art Galleries and picking out artists or topics with similar themes and sharing them with you.

I am hoping NEW FOLLOWERS will peruse the galleries and the REGULAR FOLLOWERS share these amazing worlds with their friends and neighbors.

After all — what is Art for if not to share?

How about this week we look at some Jewelry Part One?

 

Earrings

 

Cartier

 

Rings

 

Jeremy May

 

Pierre Sterlé

 

Melissa Schmidt

 

Art Smith

 

Georges Fouquet

 

 

 

Watches

 

Terhi Tolvanen

 

John Paul Miller

 

18 thoughts on “Looking Back on Friday … Again — Jewelry Part One

  1. I’m having a flashback to someone wearing an Art Smith necklace, similar to the one ouctured, but I can’t figure out whether I saw it IRL or on tv.

    Waaay back in college, I learned to make wax molds, cast silver, and set stones. I wish I still had the tools & skills!

    Like

      1. I made a lot of silver rings w/gemstones. I might still have one. I also made a lot of silly earrings & necklaces with toys and minature objects… don’t think I have any of those. Now I’m debating making resin jewelry.

        Like

        1. It doesn’t happen often, but I get excited when I see an artwork by an artist I’ve highlighted on tv or in a movie. Not artists like Renoir or Monet. They are everywhere. But when I watched that program on Stolen WWII art/Degenerate Art, I saw a number of the artists/art that I showcased earlier. It was fun!

          Liked by 1 person

          1. Yhat would be awesome! I get a thrill any time I recognize my city is a movie ot tv show, which is often. I imagine it’s way cooler to recognize artwork that you’ve shown!

            Like

            1. I have to laugh — a lot of the Blues Brothers was shot in the suburb where I lived my first 24 years — Park Ridge. I was thrilled to see familiar sites. But they’d be driving down a street and I’d see one part of town then a different street and a mall that was never there. What a ride!

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Yeah… lots of impossible connections here too.
                SNL’s “Californians” skits always made fun of people’s habit of detailed the driving routes they took, and I’d listen closely to determine whether the path they said was actually feasible (most times, they weren’t).

                Like

Share Your Thoughts!