Showing posts with label antique button jewelry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antique button jewelry. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Holiday Open Studio, Trunk Show with Kingmond Young, Etsy Holiday Shop

Trunk Show w/ Kingmond Young Photography - just added!

Mark your calendar! We've just added a last minute event to our holiday show schedule for folks in the Bay Area!

Join us for a Meet the Artist reception as part of the 3rd annual Bernal Holiday Stroll with Kingmond Young Photography, the photographer who did the studio photoshoot this summer, and changed our lives.

Kingmond's photos capture the elegance of our work with an artistic vision and a timeless elegance. The chance to see Kingmond Young's studio and body of work is not to be missed!


Thursday, December 6, 2012, 6-9pm

Kingmond Young Photography
416 Cortland Ave, San Francisco, CA 94110



3rd Anniversary Party and Holiday Open Studio

Celebrate with us at our Holiday Open Studio AND - 3rd Anniversary Party!!!

Sat. December 8 and Sun. December 9
10am - 4pm at
19 Caleta Ave in San Anselmo, Ca.

Preview our 2013 Collection and get up to 50% off discontinued designs at our Holiday Open Studios! Whether you seek affordable gift options or red-carpet-worthy statement jewelry you will love the new collections! Come see the new designs before any retailers get them and shop directly from the Compass Rose Design Jewelry studio!

As our special guests, you will receive an exclusive 20% Open Studio Discount on our whole collection.

* Bring us your antique doodads! Give old junk-treasure a new life with our Junk Drawer and Pocket Watch Retirement Program (read more)
 

 

Etsy Holiday Shop in SoHo

If you missed our last blog post, here is an update on our vintage railroad button cufflinks being featured in the brick and mortar pop-up Etsy holiday shop in SoHo, New York City.

image courtesy of ww.etsy.com/holidayshop
Our vintage railroad cufflinks were part of a collection curated by Jesse Thorn, of Bullseye with Jesse Thorn, and the menswear blog, Put This On.

image courtesy of ww.etsy.com/holidayshop
DNAinfo.com in New York just did a story about the Etsy holiday shop and has a few great photos.

Upcoming Events

Trunk Show at 416 Gallery
w/ Kingmond Young Photography
December 6, 2012, 6-9pm
416 Cortland Ave
San Francisco, Ca.

Compass Rose Design Holiday Open Studios
December 8 & 9, 2012, 10am - 6pm
San Anselmo, Ca.
email for directions

Nightlife at the Academy
December 13, 2012, 6-10pm
California Academy of Sciences
55 Music Concourse Drive, San Francisco, Ca.

Marin History Museum Holiday Fair
December 14, 2012, 5-8pm
1026 Court Street, Court Plaza off 4th St.
San Rafael, Ca.

SHOP NOW and save 15% with secret code: VICTORIA15
 
Find Compass Rose Design on Facebook  for deals and give-aways!

Monday, August 20, 2012

National Button Society Conference, Modern Man Portland, Trunk Show

Did you know that there exist a subculture of fellow humans who identify as Button People? We just got back from the National Button Society Conference in Portland, Oregon.  If you were wondering where all the grandmothers disappeared to during the second week of August, we can explain.



Since 1939, The National Button Society has been meeting and collecting and sharing history - through buttons. It was good to connect with people in their 70s and 80s who took us under their wings like a flock of mother hens.


There were buttons of every shape, era, theme and size - just hundreds and hundreds of buttons dating as far back as the 16th and 17th centuries. Prices ranged from $1 to almost $1500. It was a serious business with plenty of room for newbies and amateurs like us.


Buttons are in the top 10 most collected items in the U.S. Perhaps buttons appeal to collectors because they are so terribly portable and often affordable, but also because they represent the history of fashion, art, architecture, military conquest, sports, and social trends.


The military themes, braided loops, epilets, tassels and other trims we still see in fashion today have their origins in late 18th century France.  The lavish trims sported on military uniforms worn during the Napoleonic wars (1793-1815) infiltrated French fashion for both women and men, a legacy that has lasted more than 200 years.


The above buttons, from the 1890s through the 1920s are referred to as "gay nineties" with glinting glass centers. The nostalgic term originated in the 1920s, harkening back to a time of Oscar Wilde, Aubrey Beardsley, society scandals and the birth of the aesthetic movement and art nouveau.


Buttons also represent a history of industrialization - innovations in manufacturing and engineering. 
By the 1860s, manufacturing techniques and industrial presses made beautifully detailed tinted metal buttons possible. Buttons also hold a record of popular cultures, with scenes from classic tragedies, popular plays and operas. Visible in the photo above, we see the Trojan hero, Hector near the bottom of the photo. Near the top center of the photo, bowing in the crook of the crescent moon, we see Pierrot, the 17th century Italian pantomime, kneeling before his sweetheart.


 It was wonderful to be in Portland, visit McMenamin's Edgefield with its wonderful gardens and fabulous beer, and now we are glad to be home with so many new buttons and ideas to work with!


We also visited our friends Chris and Emily at Modern Man Barbershop in Portland. Downstairs is a SUPER classy and elegant barber shop where you can get a REAL shave.


Upstairs is a whisky bar run by Chris's parents, and it's awesome. I love the two spaces in one concept - a sophisticated but unpretentious walk back through time.


In other news - we just had our first trunk show last weekend and will be definitely planning for a Christmas event. It was a delight to see old friends and new fans - and fun to dress up our house as a boutique!


And Finally... another photo from the Kingmond Young Photoshoot!  


Tiburon Arts Festival
August 25 & 25, 2012 in Tiburon, Ca.

Willits Kinnetic Carnivale
September 8 & 9 in Willits, Ca.

Urban Air Market
September 16, 2012 in San Francisco, Ca.

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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

NeoClassical Divas, Empire Waists & Napoleon's Women

The history of fashion and design is at the center of our work at Compass Rose Design Jewelry and I love sharing the historical moments of beauty and imagination that inspire our designs. This NeoClassical Revival choker made with a late-Victorian button is a direct reference to the jewelry worn the women in Napoleon's life from 1790-1814.

Victorian Button Ornate Neoclassical Necklace by Compass Rose Design
The emergence of fashion as an expression of individuality rather than social class alone was a concept that took form after the French Revolution as the old aristocratic regimes began to crumble and transform. We can understand Neoclassical fashion movement and it's submovements as many other youth style subcultures that emerge in times of social uncertainty and political transition - both embracing and ironically rejecting previous fashion trends. For most of the 18th century, fashion showcased the wealth of the aristocracy with silk brocades, formal lace and layers upon layers of horse hair crinolines for the ladies, which were both hot and unhygienic. This 1796 caricature captures and satirizes this transition:

A satirical 1796 contrast between old 16th-century and cutting-edge Directoire clothing styles.
Royalists, aristocrats and other anti-revolutionaries had been guillotined during the Reign of Terror, and after Robespierre himself lost his head, the Directoire period emerged (1795-1799.  It was in this post-Revolutionary moment that disgruntled artists and youths started to wear extreme and outlandish versions, which became known as Incroyable and Merveilleuse style. Many of these young people were in fact the children and survivors of those beheaded by Madame Guillotine. The inspiration for the hyperbolic Incroyable and Merveilleuse styles comes from two central inspirations; the English country gentleman, adored by the French in the 1770s. For women, the  Classical Roman chiton. Portraits of notable Parisian socialites like Madame Récamier, painted by Jacques Louis David codified Neoclassical sensibilities.

 
Perhaps in a conscious move to distance oneself from the trappings of aristocratic life, the intricate lace, silk brocades and powdered wigs so popular during the 18th century fell out of favor.  Idealized versions of daily English fashion crept into Parisian society style as fabrics which allowed movement and outdoor wear. Pinterest is a great research tool for tracing visual trends - like the evolution of corsets and waistlines and fashionable silhouette - you can see more historical fashion, jewelry and design photos on my Pinterest page.


In addition to the sociopolitical transformation of the old aristocratic structure, excavations at Pompeii and Herculaneum in the mid 1750s influenced the emergence of Neoclassical design.  By the mid 1790s in Western Europe, classical images of flowing gowns, carved stone cameos and idealized notions of Greek civilization reached French and English society. Tight-laced corsets were temporarily out of fashion while the women draped themselves in flowing gauzy gowns reminiscent of Grecian statues. These 1790 stays provided some support, while allowing the natural figure to be seen.

1790 stays, undergarments worn with Neoclassical dress styles

Les Merveilleuses, "Fabulous Diva," flourished in the live fast, die young social mentality that took over the salons of Paris after the Reign of Terror. At the center of the Neoclassical fashion moment, we find several significant and colorful women: Thérésa Cabarrus Fontenay Tallien and Joséphine de Beauharnais (later Napoleon's wife) both of whom had narrowly escaped death during the Reign of Terror.

Theresa Tallien
Josephine, was prominent in Parisian social circles and had her daughter, Hortense, educated by one of Marie Antionette's famous tutors and ladies in waiting, Jeanne Campan.  Thérésa, like her best friend, Josephine, gained her power through charisma and choosing powerful lovers. Her salons in Paris were famous and Theresa herself was at the center of  Greek Revival Directoire style fashion that emerged. The à la Grecque style adopted by Thérésa, Joséphine, and Madame Récamier consisted of clingy, flowing classical Greek styles in white muslin and silk, draped with brightly colored shawls and ribbons edged with classical and exotic motifs.

Napoleon's Josephine
Joséphine de Beauharnais, who was very much involved with the French aristocracy and lost her first husband, a General in the French army, to the guillotine. Through the connections of her best friend, Theresa Tallien and her husband, Josephine was freed after the execution of Robespierre.  Needless to say, these events left a vacuum of confusion into which walked, Napoleon Bonaparte.Though Josephine had two children by a previous marriage to a French aristocrat, she had no more children despite her marriage to Napoleon and affairs with other lovers.

Napoleon's niece and adopted daughter, Stephanie de Beauharnais
These Neoclassical fashion sensibilities, echoes of an ancient Greek past combined with sensibilities of new European Empire, have never left us. Cameos, empire waists and cascading jewels so flattering with the Neoclassical neckline remain treasured by women everywhere. The emerald and diamond necklace worn in the portrait by Stephanie de Beauharnais is in the collections Victoria and Albert Museum. The emerald drops at the back, added in 1820, can be detached and worn as earrings.

Napoleon's second wife, Luisa Augusta Wilhelmina Amelia

Napoleon's second marriage to Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma, satisfied Napoleon's desire to marry into legitimate European royalty.  Captured by ideas of Empire, Napoleon adorned his crown with ancient Greek stone cameos discovered during excavations in the mid-1750s. 


Ruby Red Glass Cameo Double Strand Necklace by Compass Rose Design

These neoclassical divas have captured my love and attention and inspired a new series of Neoclassical-style designs based on the jewelry of the women in Napoleon's life, including his wives, Josephine and Marie Louise sisters Caroline, Elisa and Pauline from 1795-1814.  We'll be debuting some of these new designs at Unique SF this weekend!!!

Victorian Button necklace with Greek Hero theme,
typical of Neoclassical themes by
Compass Rose Design.
The mythic theme used in the late Victorian button in the above necklace was a lasting legacy of Neoclassical themes carried through art and artifact back to France and England through excavations in the late 18th century. 

Print of a drawing by John Flaxman of a scene in Virgil's Iliad, 1795


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Saturday, February 18, 2012

Steampunk Insect Jewelry and the Victorian & Edwardian Era

Victorian inspired steampunk insect jewelry has risen in popularity, but few know the history of these designs are echos of elegant designs made more than a century ago. Throughout the Victorian era, images of the natural world were popular in jewelry, fashion, and furniture design. 

One of my most popular Time Flies necklace designs harkens back to earlier designs.  I made this large statement pendant with an ivory colored antique pocket watch face, probably art deco, with red and black numbering. The  detailed antiqued gold and brass butterfly stamping is reminiscent of art nouveau designs by the French designer Vever.

Vever was a family-owned jewelry design house that opened in 1821 in Metz, France. They specialized in precious gem setting as well as semi-precious and organic gemstones, creating high quality art nouveau designs popular with upscale clientele. The family company won a Grand Prize for gem-set jewelery at the 1899 Paris International Exposition, and contributed to exhibitions in Moscow (1891), Chicago (1893), and Brussels (1897).   The firm won a second Grand Prize at Paris’s 1900 International Exposition for their exquisite gem-set Art Nouveau jewelry designs. 

This 1894 Late Victorian evening gown is from the archive of the Victoria and Albert museum - you can get lost for hours! Made in a gorgeous black accented with glass beads and sequins, trimmed with tulle, embroidered net in a design of butterflies applied to the skirt and bodice, lined with silk, the bodice strengthened on the inside with whalebone. The large sleeves are also typical of this period, a revival of similar 1830s balloon style sleeve, called l'imbecile (silly) or a la folle (foolish). These exaggerated sleeve styles often required small down shoulder pillows, called sleeve pumpers. From the 1840s until the brief revival in the 1890s, sleeves were more tailored.
Pictured at right, this Compass Rose Design custom dragonfly design was a custom request - I love how it turned out with the amethyst Swarovksi crystal drop bead detail. Again, this brass dragonfly has incredible detailing and fabulous whimsy.  Victorians put great stock in symbolic romantic ideas, drawing upon ancient symbols in sentimental designs.

These jewelry designs reflect the late nineteenth-century interest in the natural world, including moths, butterflies, dragonflies, and others. The diamond, sapphire and pearl dragonfly brooch is art nouveau - circa 1890-1905.

My Compass Rose Design Jewelry mechanical clockwork beetle ring is a revival of a late nineteenth century beetle design. I've added a steampunk element with the antique mechanical jeweled watch movement. This design combines industrial elements with late Victorian romantic and natural design qualities. I have this design in both a ring and pendant version.


The late Victorian original that inspired me is pictured at left. The body of this elegant gold insect pin is fashioned from a stuning pearl, the head set with green garnets and its eyes represented by two faceted diamonds. The brooch is marked on its hook "J & M" for the firm of Jacques & Marcus, which operated in New York from about 1882 to 1892.



Sunday, February 20, 2011

Victorian Buttons, Victorian Ladies and Luscious Inspiration

I am increasingly drawn back to the original jewelry designs and the world of these buttons in their original incarnation. In celebration of the bosoms upon which these buttons began collecting their stories - I offer a few of the favorite antique button images I came across.



You can just imagine the layers of corsets and undergarments! It's also no surprise that I come across repeats of some designs. With so many matching buttons - it's inevitable.


Oh... rigid relaxation.....


I like the collar buttons on the one below - as if buttons all up the front were not sufficient.


Buttons on the side..

I love seeing some of the larger buttons - and the high level of detail.


...or both sides....

Throw in some feathers, and we're good to go!


I just got a fabulous lot of Victorian and antique picture buttons at an antique fair and am excited about the new designs swirling around in my head.


Check out some of my latest antique button necklaces in my etsy shop:


The necklace above I made with an intricate garden Butterfly design accented with two shades of shimmering green Czech glass beads.


This fabulous button has a highly detailed dragon or griffin - how mythic!


Always a fan of natural scenes - this sparkling cattail button has glinting faceted marcasite bits set off by the mix of gold and bronze tones.

Don't forget about my February 15% off from my Etsy shop with FEB15

10% off my direct Compass Rose Design shop w/ RCRD10

Vsit the Compass Rose Design website for upcoming events and discounts

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