1 minute read
Chains to LOVE
from Couture the Magazine
by David Perry
There are many ways COUTURE jewelry designers express their individual styles through chain necklaces. Some look to the distant past for inspiration. Others capture signature styles in their collections through the links of their chains.
Classic and creative, Michal Cadar brings the motifs of her CADAR collection into gold chains handcrafted in New York and Italy. Sculpted hearts with angled sides fly around the Wings of Love necklaces. Playful lariats composed of slinky snake chains have a crocodile on the clasp.
Everything from Ari and Corina Madilian’s Single Stone is made in Los Angeles and has a romantic vintage vibe including the gold chains. The lyrical quality of 19th century designs permeates the large loops of the Single Stone Club Necklaces. They pair perfectly with a locket or symbolic pendant.
Divine variations on the uber popular paperclip chain that look as though they might have belonged to the stylish and sexy Lady Chatterley can be found in the collection. There are also delicate understated styles. The Dash Chain with diamonds is the kind of jewel you put on and never take off.
PROUNIS designer and craftswoman extraordinaire, Jean Prounis doesn’t just study and take design cues from classical Greek jewels, many of her chains are made in the same way they were in the past. “Our chains are made from handpulled 22-karat wire that we alloy in our studio, form into coils, then weave or link to the design at hand, using ancient gold-smithing techniques,” explains Jean. Other chains in the New Yorker’s collection are made in Italy. “We work with a family business that uses antique Italian chain-making machines to our specifications that we then ornament in our studio with our signature clasps that reference antiquity, such as our Fibula and S-shaped clasps.”