Showing posts with label steampunk jewelry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steampunk jewelry. Show all posts

Friday, April 12, 2013

Spring Trunk Show at Oaklandish - Debut of Fall Collection!

We're celebrating spring with a last minute Spring Trunk Show at Oaklandish this Saturday from 12-3pm at 1444 Broadway in Oakland, California. We'll be debuting a new line of designs I've been working on the last several weeks.


I've made lots of new - Neoclassically inspired designs with front toggle clasps. I used to only do these on the Antiquity Collection, but they add such an elegance at an affordable price.


Above: Mother of Pearl Victorian Button, 1893 Worlds Fair Souvenir, Vintage French Tourist Medal.


I'm also using gold fill pocket watches, metallic watch dials and the result is rather pleasing. As the industrial age took hold, the Victorians became very nostalgic about nature. That tension is reflected in the beauty of the Victorian-revival dragonfly contrasted with the mechanical metallic watch dial. These new designs will be on our website next week.

Check for event updates on our events page!

Trunk Show at Oaklandish
Saturday, April 13 2013, 12-3pm
1444 Broadway,
Oakland Ca.

Urban Air Market - Spring Show SF
May 5, 2013, 11am-6pm
Hayes Valley: Octavia Blvd. @ Hayes
San Francisco, Ca.

PG&E Spring Bazaar
May 9, 2013, 11am-4pm
66 Beale St.
San Francisco, Ca.

Marin Open Studios
May 11 & 12, 2013, 11am-6pm
19 Caletta Ave.
San Anselmo, Ca.

Fairfax Festival
June 8 & 9, 2013
Fairfax, Ca. 


San Anselmo Art & Wine Festival
June 22 & 23, 2013
San Anselmo, Ca.

Rivertown Revival
July 20, 2013
Petaluma, Ca.

Willits Kinetic Carnivale
September 7 & 8, 2013
Willits, Ca.

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Tuesday, January 29, 2013

International Press, Horological Jewelry, SF Beer Week

As we were making watch rings for our February Trunk Shows (especially excited about our SF Beer Week show with City Beer Store), we got an exciting package in the mail today.  Two months ago, I got an inquiry from a London luxury watch magazine launching a ladies edition. We did an interview and it got published!


 It's a beautiful article and a great honor to have both our words and photos featured.



The article was opportunity to articulate how I contextualize our work in history and the ways I see patterns of the Victorian Era reflected in our current relationship with technology and fashion.

 It's a gorgeous magazine - overflowing with luxurious full-page glossy photos - totally amazing.



We also got some glorious feedback from an etsy customer this afternoon - all in all a very good day.



If you're in California - visit us at one of our three February Trunk Shows!

Trunk Show at Modern Eden

February 1, 2013, 6-9pm
Modern Eden
403 Francisco St. San Francisco, Ca.

An Evening of Hearts & Crafts

February 8 2013, 4-8pm
ArtWorks Downtown
San Rafael, Ca.

Trunk Show at City Beer Store
SF BEERWEEK

February 10, 2013, 3-6pm
City Beer Store
1168 Folsom St., Suite 101 San Francisco, Ca.   
 
Find Compass Rose Design on Facebook for deals and give-aways!





See our Events Calendar for Upcoming Shows 



Tuesday, January 15, 2013

The Order of the Eastern Star, San Francisco Roots, Edwardian Ball

The Compass Rose Design 2013 Collection is rich with history and heirloom pieces, like this Order of the Eastern Star Jewel Medal Necklace from the Antiquity Collection.  I've been very inspired both by having my family photo albums around, getting lost in Downton Abbey and a fantastic book on the history of jewelry from antiquity to the present.  This has resulted in many new necklaces for Spring Trunk Shows and our installation with Five & Diamond at the upcoming Edwardian Ball.


I first heard about The Order of the Eastern Star through my dad. His maternal grandparents moved to San Francisco soon after the earthquake. They had met in Osteopathy college in Iowa and headed west, doubtless in search of opportunity a western metropolis rebuilding and redefining . Strange to think it was just 50 years after the gold rush and within just a few years of the big 1906 quake. The first city directory to show their osteopathic office on Mission Street was in 1910. My paternal great-grandmother, Eleanor, was a Grand Matron of the Order of the Eastern Star, San Francisco Chapter, in 1922.


I have no idea what this meant, what her duties were, or what the organization was about - other than being a networking opportunity. The Order of the Eastern Star was founded in 1818 as an affiliate organization of the Masons. These organizations originate from a history of trade-based community help and self-reliance before there were state institutions to deal with the costs of illness, death, and life.  From what I can discern, they evolved into Victorian reinterpretations of the occult and constructions of ritual and guild-type camaraderie - coupled with some practical local professional networking and service work. What I find particularly endearing - are the notes, I assume made by Marion herself about the movements during the ceremony - wiggling dotted lines meant to connote secret and profound movements of the order. 


The photo above is the Masonic Temple at 25 Van Ness St. in San Francisco where the ceremony took place in 1922. The first Masonic lodge, built in 1860 and burned down in the 1906 fire, was at 1 Montgomery. Its replacement at 25 Van Ness Avenue was constructed in 1911 - a seven-story Neoclassical structure inspired by a Florentine palazzo. (more on the Masonic Temple)

My family's roots in San Francisco travel through three generations and more than a century. This photo of my dad's dad is at Dolores Park facing northeast circa 1915-1916. The original Mission High School is behind him - built in 1898 and burned in 1922.


Almost the same view from during the earthquake: you can see the construction and recovery that happened in just 10 years.

 
Below is a photo of my grandfather as a toddler at Ocean Beach before 1920. His 1915 birth certificate shows the address as 493 Diamond St. and his aunt and uncle lived in a fancy house at 68 Castro St. That was before my Great-grandfather Lewis lost all the family money - sitting in the background to the right in the photo below with his hands clasped around his knee - head slightly down. Eyes, probably closed. This would have been a few years before he lost the family bank account in a failed gold mine scheme in the Yukon.



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See our Events Calendar for Upcoming Shows


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, November 12, 2012

Apple Pear Crisp, Holiday Shows, Winter Sale!

We've had a breath between summer and winter Compass Rose Design shows and have been enjoying settling into the winter weather. A quick announcement - we finally made enough spoon rings to list - I made my first a couple years ago and now they are finally available in our shop.  We'll also have them at our Holiday Open Studio.
Autumn and winter conjure many memories of baking Dutch deserts with my mom. We would buy fruit by the flat from Jelich Ranch, one of the last working fruit farms in San Mateo County until the resurgence of organic farming.  Mr. Jelich was a larger than life old school farmer and a man who refused to sell land his orchards to developers as Silicon Valley took root. We'd pull up to the fruit stand in my mom's old deisel and honk the horn to announce our arrival- old school local commerce. I remember Mr. Jelich - and the vintage crate stickers and occasional risqué vintage pinup on the wall of the old fruit sand. There is nothing better than a fig or apple or pear freshly cut open by Mr. Jelich - a secret handful of berries - just for you. But these times are passed, and what remains is recipes and memories. Here's an old clipping with the great man himself just as I remember him.


Winter baking is about family and memory. Warm smells of appelkoek (apple cake) and pear tart conjure images of warmth, motherlove, home and hearth. It has long been a dream of mine to have fruit trees, and we finally do. My favorite is the apple and asian pear - each branch grows a different variety thanks to the art of grafting. Though I'd love to bake up a tray of tarts, apple crisp is another classic favorite - all the sentimental enjoyment at a fraction of the effort!

Apple/Pear Crisp Ingredients:
  • 1 cup brown sugar
  • 1/2 cup flour
  • 1/2 tsp. nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp. cinnamon 
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 1/4 cup butter (1/2 stick)
  • 5 cups apples (or mix of Asian pear and apple)
  • squeeze of lemon (or lime)
  • touch of citrus zest for top (optional)
Preheat oven to 350. Peel and slice apples and pears. Sprinkle with citrus juice and cinnamon. Mix other ingredients and sprinkle on top of apples in greased 8x8x2 baking dish. Bake at 350 for 40-55 minutes or until top is slightly browned and carmelized.

The recipe is super simple and has lots of wiggle room!


I didn't have a lemon to squeeze on the apples and pears to keep them from oxidizing, so I just used some lime. Then I added a bit of lime zest to the top - just a touch for a delightful and subtle zing.


Quick and easy to make and SO delicious!!


I did a mix of asian pears and apples and it was amazing!!! Delicious to behold!


WINTER SALE!
20% off until 11/18/12 with secret code: SNOW20 at www.compassrosedesignjewelry.com 


Winter Events
Bazaar Bizaare Holiday Show
December 1 & 2, 2012, 11am-6pm
Concourse Exhibition Center EAST HALL
620 Seventh St., San Francisco, Ca.

Trunk Show at 416 Gallery
w/ Kingmond Young Photography
December 6, 2012
416 Cortland, 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.

Find Compass Rose Design on Facebook

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Eiffel Tower Controversy, Wear History, Winter Shows

Did you know that the Eiffel Tower was originally despised by the art community? Story is at the center of our work at Compass Rose Design, and we often find that the real historical bits are even more fascinating and contain more intrigue and oddity than fantasy. Lately, I've been particularly captivated by the World's Expositions of the late 19th and early 20th centuries as the world was in the dynamic transition into the modern industrial age.


The 1889 Exposition took place in Paris, and was the occasion for which the great Eiffel Tower was constructed.  Showcasing the industrial and cultural wonders of the world, the Paris Exposition was also graced by Buffalo Bill and American sharpshooter Annie Oakley with their "Wild West Show."



The construction of the Eiffel Tower itself was delightfully controversial, met with the unconstrained complaints of the art establishment. In turn of the century Europe, art and engineering were distinct and separate disciplines.

 
During the planning of the tower, the Parisian art establishment published a scathing condemnation of the project:
"We, writers, painters, sculptors, architects and passionate devotees of the hitherto untouched beauty of Paris, protest with all our strength, with all our indignation in the name of slighted French taste, against the erection…of this useless and monstrous Eiffel Tower … To bring our arguments home, imagine for a moment a giddy, ridiculous tower dominating Paris like a gigantic black smokestack, crushing under its barbaric bulk Notre Dame, the Tour Saint-Jacques, the Louvre, the Dome of les Invalides, the Arc de Triomphe, all of our humiliated monuments will disappear in this ghastly dream. And for twenty years … we shall see stretching like a blot of ink the hateful shadow of the hateful column of bolted sheet metal" (from wikipedia)


It looks as though history resolved the matter. At any rate, may souvenirs, photos and other bits of history have survived from the Paris Exposition - saved in jewelry cases and cigar boxes and forgotten at the backs of drawers.   Let's take this 1889 watch fob we came across several weeks ago at a flea market and see what we can find. The watch fob, one of many commemorative souvenirs, was made by N.J. Schloss & Co.



Not only is it a delightful medal, but it's a time capsule filled with story. As pocket watches were firmly in fashion between 1850 up until the 1940s and 1950s, watch fobs were a popular souvenir item. This watch fob was made by the N.J. Schloss & Co. a New York-based clothing company as a commemoration of the medal they received at the Paris Exposition.  The Eiffel Tower and exposition grounds are visible in the foreground of the medal.


Though the Eiffel Tower was originally intended to be a temporary construction, it was of course never torn down and continues to serve as a monument to French culture, art, engineering, and industry.  Permits expired in 1909, but by the eve or World War I, powerful radio antennas were attached to the tower, which were later credited with jamming German communication systems to hindered the German approach. Originally a source of artistic contentiousness, the Eiffel Tower has become THE symbol of Paris and visited by more than 200 million people since the 1889 Exposition.


Now this history is wearable and available in our shop: 

Winter Events
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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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Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Edwardian Street Fashion and Victorian Outlaw Style - Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid

It comes as no surprise that I find Victorian and Edwardian fashion, jewelry, design and technology endlessly fascinating, particularly as represented early photography.  Perhaps it is the very availability of photography and the ability to see faces of the past that is so compelling.  We are reminded that we are descended from actual people, like these ladies caught in a candid street style photos by Edward Linley Sanbourne.


You might enjoy the fashion and photo collections I've compiled on Pinterest on Victorian Fashion and Jewelry and Edwardian Fashion. However, it's all too common for photos to appear without context and origin.  The Reddit HistoryPorn subreddit is a great selection of historical photos with comments and sources. I came across this photo of Butch Cassidy and found myself utterly charmed by his style.


This 1900 photograph taken in Forth Worth, Texas, shows Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch. Notice how sharp these outlaw cowboys look - all spiffed up for their official portrait. Called the "Fort Worth Five," This photo features Harry A. Longabaugh, aka the Sundance Kid, Ben Kilpatrick, aka the Tall Texan, Robert Leroy Parker, aka Butch Cassidy; Standing: Will Carver & Harvey Logan, aka Kid Curry; Fort Worth, Texas, 1900. Each has their pocket watch chain outfitted with a decorative fob. 

Until about 1850, pocket watches required keys to keep them wound, which were attached at the end of the watch chain. Once "keyless wind" watches were introduced - some of the first to Queen Victoria at the 1851 Great Exhibition, decorative fobs increasingly came into fashion as an expression of personal style - lockets, cameos, monograms, signets and seals, coins and other keepsakes, most of which are represented by the gents in Cassidy's crew.


This most fabulous studio portrait of the Sundance Kid and his sweetheart, known as Ethel or Etta Place, is nothing short of spectacular. Harry Alonzo Longabough, was a known as the Sundance Kid, a name he got during the 18 months he did for stealing a horse, saddle and a gun in Sundance, Wyoming. Much of historical record available on this crew is from the scattered notes of the Pinkerton Detectives, who recorded that Etta and Harry purchased a lapel watch and stickpin (she's wearing them in the photo). This portrait, taken at a studio in Union Square on Broadway was taken just before they fled to Buenos Aires, Argentina on the British ship Herminius.



After ranching in South America for about 5 years, both Butch Cassidy and Longaborough were alleged to have been killed after a robbery in Bolivia on November 6, 1908, there are lots of delightful stories about post-1908 sightings of both he and Butch Cassidy long after 1908, including testimony from family members and exhumed gravesites! You can listen to a radio story from Radio New Zealand here.
  


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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.