In the making: Jewellery

  • Jan 1, 1000

    pre historic times

    pre historic times
    Jewellery was made from shells, stone and bones.
  • Feb 27, 1000

    Ancient World

    discovers making jewellery with metal technique
  • Aug 27, 1000

    gold in egypt 3000BC

    gold in egypt 3000BC
    gold became the new method to making jewellery - it was rre, did not tarnish, malleable and fairly easy to work with
  • Oct 27, 1000

    Greece 1400BC

    use of beads, shells, flowers and beetles. Beads were made by joining two flat pieces of gold and filling them with sand.
  • Jul 27, 1200

    Medieval Jewellery 1200-1500

    Medieval Jewellery 1200-1500
    Reflected an intense hierarchical and status-concious society. Royalty and nobility wore gold, ilver and precious gems. Humblr ranks wore base metals, such as copper and pewter. Gems were polished rather than cut. Enamels - ground glasses fireed at high temp.
  • Mar 27, 1400

    Renaissance Jewellery 15th Century

    Renaissance Jewellery 15th Century
    Passion for splendor. enamels covering both sides of jewel become more elaborate and coloourful. advances in cutting technique increased glitter of tones. Engraving occured and portrait jewels became a trend - awareness of individual.
  • 17th Century Jewels

    17th Century Jewels
    Changes in fashion reflected changes in Jewellery. Dark fabric required elaborate gold jewellery, new softer ppastel shades beccame graceful bacckdrops for gemstones and pearls. advancing cutting techniques meant the increase of sparkle in gemstones in candlelight. jewels included large bodice or breeat ornnaments, pinned to stiff dress fabric.
  • 19th Century Jewels

    19th Century Jewels
    Jewellery design focused on the past. classical styles were popular, ancient techniques were revived (style of archaeological jewellery). Jewels were then inspireed by the Medieval/Renaissance period. More elaborate jewellery were worn bybb women and there was a focus on hand-crafting.
  • Art Nouveau Jewellery/ Garland style 1895-1910

    Art Nouveau Jewellery/ Garland style 1895-1910
    organic pieces inspired by eroticism and death - subtle effects of materials such as glass, horn and enamel .
  • Art Deco Jewellery 1990s-50s

    Art Deco Jewellery 1990s-50s
    Jewellery design 1920s-1950s maintained both innovation and glamour. 1933 gold returned to fashion, partly because it was cheaper than platinum.
  • Contemporary Jewellery

    Contemporary Jewellery
    New tech and non-precious materials including plastics, paper and textiles have overturned traditional implicit in jewellery. There is a push for wearable art jewel pieces
  • Apple watch

    Apple watch
    Combining smart phone techniques into jewellery. Wearable Jewellery with smart features.
  • 3d printing jewellery

    3d printing jewellery