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Jenny Llewellyn is a jewellery designer-maker based at Cockpit Arts in London. Vibrant, fluid and experimental, Jenny’s practice is an exploration of colour! Her jewellery is characterised by handcrafted, organic forms of precious metals, combined with vibrant bursts of silicone.
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Lynne MacLachlan's work plays with light, space and colour; vibrant geometric forms reveal ephemeral, shimmering optical patterns, crossing the boundaries of design, art and fashion.
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Scottish designer/maker Tina MacLeod works predominately in silver but also explores Japanese alloy techniques such as shibuichi and mokume gane to create hollow forms. Using colour as a surface texture through patination, she is able to convey a sense of the unique nature of the Scottish Highlands.
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Scottish jeweller Susan Macleod creates painterly jewels inspired by her sketches of botanical forms.
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Lindsey Mann combines printed anodised aluminium with precious metals and altered found objects to create playful jewellery.
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Rhona McCallum is an MA graduate from Edinburgh College of Art working in precious and non-precious metals and natural stone. Rhona works from her studio in Glasgow and exhibits her work in the UK and internationally.
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Heather McDermott is a contemporary jeweller based on the Isle of Skye. Her newest collection ‘Tidal Surge’ contemporises the shoreline of Skye by using stainless steel, acrylic and vivid colour. Heather creates statement, wearable pieces that reflect her love of contemporary jewellery. Heather graduated from Edinburgh College of Art in 2011 with an MA in jewellery.
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Born in Crail, Scotland. Sheila studied at the Glasgow School of Art, then at the Royal College of Art, London. She is a Freeman of the Goldsmiths' Company.Her work is sold in Craft Council Selected Galleries, such as the Scottish Gallery, Roger Billcliffe Gallery, Lesley Craze gallery, Ruthin Craft Centre, Primavera, Cambridge.Sheila is also a short course tutor at West Dean College, East Sussex.
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Karen lives and works in Edinburgh. Particularly influenced by a 1950’s and 1960‘s colour palette and the simplicity of Scandinavian design, her most recent work involves inlaying pattern or simple line details into resin, giving the impression of a continual line and form. Within design she is fascinated by subtle changes in tone, which create harmony, producing jewellery that compliments any occasion.
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Zsuzsi uses traditional enamelling techniques to express modern concepts, her work has a distinct avant-garde personal language. Her pieces are in many private collections and exhibited in galleries and design shops worldwide.
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