Archive for June 18th, 2007

Tiny jewelry shop is global player

Tiny jewelry shop is global player
Expert Jewelry Repair & Design finds customers in far-flung places
Oshkosh Northwestern, WI
By Maureen Wallenfang
Post-Crescent staff writer

Michael Rivero lives in Oahu, Hawaii, with a view of Pearl Harbor, and does visual effects for commercials, movies and TV shows, including “Lost.”

When he wanted to make a custom lapel pin for his production company, he searched the Internet and found Expert Jewelry Repair & Design, a store that could do the job.

It was in Appleton, Wisconsin.

The microscopically small jewelry store at 636 W. College Ave. is one many Appleton residents probably pass by without a second thought as they cross the train tracks at Richmond Street.

But the shop has gotten a fair amount of national and international attention and orders.

It’s all due to its unusual jewelercam, a live camera that shows two master bench jewelers making and repairing jewelry, and the Internet savvy of its owner who knows how to keep the site on the top of the browsers.

“The Internet levels the playing field,” said owner Randy Kester. “I read all the Google tips and tricks. I experimented.”

The result is that the tiny place shines on the Internet. A Google search for “jewelry repair” brings up the jewelercam.com site third in a listing of more than 9 million pages.

That’s how Rivero found him in faraway Oahu.

“I just know him by his Web presence,” said Rivero, who ordered silver and gold versions of his Home Baked Entertainment pie logo pin and a gold pendant version for his wife.

“Randy came across with this wonderful can-do attitude. That won us over.”

The shop

Expert Jewelry Repair & Design isn’t a typical jewelry store. It’s more funky than showy with its recycled Balinese teak wood showcases and a window that peeks into the jewelers’ tiny, crowded workroom.

Its jewelry is far from a carbon copy of mall store baubles. Instead, it’s world-savvy, multicultural and one-of-a-kind pieces gathered for the store by a global traveler.

The shop itself is no more than 900 square feet, about 20 feet away from the railroad tracks. When trains rumble past, jewelers put down their torches and tools until the vibrations have stopped.

With two master bench jewelers on staff — Elizabeth Stephenson and Bridget Pahnke — the store can manufacture jewelry according to the customer’s specifications. It has done work in 14- and 24-karat gold and sterling silver. It also does repairs on gold and silver heirloom pieces as well as costume jewelry.

Jewelercam

When Kester took over the operation three years ago from retiring Gary Stein, he decided to put in the jewelercam and Web site for the novelty value. Kester was a tech geek who loved fiddling.

“It stems from my interest in computers. I did Web conferencing with a girlfriend and I thought doing the jewelercam would be unique,” he said.

With a simple $7-a-month Web site and a $100 camera the size of a pack of cigarettes, he set up a site that showed jewelry making in action. A still image recycles every five seconds. He thought about using streaming video, but decided against it because dial-up users couldn’t access it easily.

Besides those who like the novelty, the site has proven practical. A far-away customer can see his own piece in the works. “I thought it would be a gimmick, but it’s been a useful tool,” he said. “Liz can hold a piece up and say, ‘Did you want the stone here?’ The customer can see it and say, ‘No, that’s not right,’ or, ‘Yes, that’s what I had in mind.’”

A school in California even recommended students watch the jewelercam to see what bench work looks like.

Most queries have been national and a few have been from foreign countries.

“I put up some coffee bean earrings on my Web page and forgot about it. Some guy from Germany saw it and he was meeting with a CEO of a coffee company. He paid more for the shipping than the earrings,” Kester said. “I had an order of 20 coat-of-arms Dracula rings for someone who had a connection to the Christopher Lee fan club in England.”

A church in Redlands, Calif., saw the site and asked Kester to cast sterling silver and gold pins. It was a $1,500 order. Caltech, also in California, had the shop make 4,000 pins for donors to a fundraising campaign.

It was all through the Web.

Local business

While the jewlercam has gotten a lot of attention, Kester said that actually just 6 percent of his volume comes from the site. About 44 percent is from the trade, meaning repair work sent over from other jewelry stores. A full 50 percent is work for individuals, mostly local.

Charlene Landskron, for example, is a local gemologist working as a business analyst for Jewelers Mutual in Neenah. She’s brought in her own custom work and recommended the shop to others because of the quality.

“They don’t have to send it out. They can custom make something and you can check on it with them as they’re making it,” she said. “A lot of retail operations can’t get special things in for you.” She has not gone through the store’s Web site.

A Chilton resident, Daniel Weiland, however, was one local customer who wouldn’t have found the store without the Internet.

“I was looking for a custom jewelry designer in Appleton a month and a half ago. He was on the top of the list,” Weiland said.

He and his fiancee wanted to create a custom wedding band with dolphins. They picked it up last Saturday.

“It’s just beautiful,” Weiland said.

Downside

While the Internet has brought in some business for the shop, it has also attracted many lookie-loos who ask for estimates but never follow through. Plus, the “Ask the Jeweler” feature has been less useful than expected.

“Nine out of 10 are boneheaded questions, but you answer them anyway,” said Kester. “The typical questions are, ‘I bought this crappy ring off eBay. What can you do to make it look better?’”

The site brings the store lots of oddball things, including belt buckles, but Kester and his staff take it all in stride.

“Some of them are a test,” said master bench jeweler Elizabeth Stephenson. “They see what you can do. Then they’ll bring in their expensive jewelry because they trust you.”

Maureen Wallenfang can be reached at 920-993-1000, ext. 287, or mwallenfang@postcrescent.com.

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Alrosa Considering $50 million Jewelry Retail Chain

Alrosa Considering $50 million Jewelry Retail Chain
IDEX Online, Isra
(June 17, ‘07, 9:00 IDEX Online Staff Reporter)

Russian diamond miner Alrosa has never limited itself solely to diamonds. The company is also involved in gold and other precious commodities. Now the miner is contemplating heading downstream with the establishment of a chain of diamond jewelry stores.

According to a report in the Russian Vedomosty newspaper, Alrosa is planning to invest $50 million in establishing the high-end retail operation. Vedomosty reports that the company is considering jewelry lines for men, women and children, with prices starting at $800.

Alrosa president Sergey Vybornov told Vedomosty, that Alrosa has the capacity to establish 50 shops in Moscow and other main cities within five years. He also said that the retail products may be manufactured outside of Russia, and suggested Armenia as a potential manufacturing location.

The plan has already drawn some criticism. Ararat Evoyan, vice president of the Russian Diamond Manufacturers Association, calls the project a “reckless scheme.”

To succeed in a jewelry production and retail operation, more the $50 million is needed, Evoyan said. Vybornov countered that the goal is to raise demand for diamonds.

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Bright, funky jewelry the trend of the season

Bright, funky jewelry the trend of the season
Kankakee Daily Journal, IL
Comment on this story
By Jaclyn Youhana

This season, fashion is all about bright, bold colors: Kelly green, bright magenta, neon orange and sunny yellow. Some of the most popular bracelets look like strung gum balls in equally vivid hues that borders on gaudy, but that’s what makes it fun.

Keep a collection of pieces to make a rainbow jealous, whether for beach side, country side or just a night out.

Here’s a list of trends to fit any fashion budget:

* Wish list: The silver batu kali citrine large square ring by John Hardy is part of his new line inspired by nature. The band is supposed to be reminiscent of river rocks, and it gives the chunky ring a funky feel. A Hilary Swank favorite, get ready to fork over $795 for this piece of beauty. Find it at Bloomingdales, Neiman Marcus or Saks Fifth Avenue on North Michigan Avenue or Macy’s on North State Street.

* Reality list: This chain bangle from Kmart. It’ll add a pop of color to your arm without bankrupting your pocket book: $7.99 OK for you?

* Wish list: The handmade earrings from Leah Jewelry. A little longer than 1 1/2 inches, these 14-karat gold earrings are made with tourmaline and freshwater pearls. The bright pink and varying shades of green in the dangling earrings look as though they were taken straight from a flower garden. Get them for $275 at leahjewelry.com.

* Reality list: Lia Sophia’s costume jewelry this season gives new meaning to flower power. The Chick A Bloom piece is a large cut-out daisy with magenta, lime, red and pale pink jewels dotting the flower. Get this charm strung on a piece of pink suede cord for $59 at www.liasophia.com.

~ Jaclyn Youhana

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