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Alice Biolo explores themes of trauma and insecurity, with a focus on what is hidden. Her work reflects human behaviour, revealing and concealing aspects of the self, through contrasts of smooth, minimal surfaces with intricate forms. She works with non-precious metals like copper and stainless steel, often combined with silver and gold.

Ami Masamitsu is drawn to the beauty in fragility, inspired by forms on the verge of disintegration or disappearance. She uses finely twisted wires shaped into letters and patterns to create the illusion of embroidery.

“The Sinking Silhouette of Amsterdam” is a jewellery series by artist Amy Cushnaghan, inspired by iconic Amsterdam buildings at risk from rising sea levels. Crafted in 9ct gold plated silver, the pieces feature gemstones like alexandrite, topaz, and sapphire, with crystal bands of moss agate, jadeite, and quartz, reflecting architecture and organic forms shaped by climate change.

Andreea Cojocaru views craftsmanship and labour as equally valuable to the materials used. Her work explores the tension between presence and absence, using deliberate reduction or repetition of key elements to question what makes something complete, functional, or precious.

Ayesha Sureya’s practice is inspired by Mudras from yoga, meditation, and dance, exploring the space between reality, mysticism, and symbolism. Working across jewellery, sculpture, textiles, and 3D technology, they use symbolic forms to challenge colonial narratives and embrace sustainable, alchemic processes.

Caitlin Murphy is a Northern Irish silversmith and third-generation maker. Her work is inspired by geometry, optical illusions and everyday patterns, translating early experiments with paper and aluminium cans into precise woven metal forms. Using materials like sterling silver, brass, titanium and niobium, she creates intricately folded, wearable sculptures that sit between jewellery and art.

Martin Cameron and Laura Breen create jewellery inspired by ancient artefacts, particularly rock crystal in historic religious pieces. Their work combines rock crystal and precious metals, crafted using traditional techniques.

Carolina Andrade creates jewellery using cast sterling silver and unconventional materials. Their work explores gender, identity, and Western cultural norms through sculptural and full-body pieces that incorporate elements of static motion.

Daisy Grice creates sculptural jewellery influenced by gothic fashion, dark art, heavy metal, and natural forms such as bones and branches. Made from recycled metals and ethically sourced materials, each piece is crafted by hand for durability, sustainability, and individuality.

Els Op De Beeck is a Belgian jewellery designer based in Italy. Her pieces blend bold, dramatic forms with emotional depth, exploring themes of memory, imagination and transformation. Drawn to metal for its strength, versatility and symbolism, she creates work that holds both beauty and meaning.

Emily Frances Barrett is an artist and jeweller whose work celebrates the beauty of decay. She transforms found objects such as pressed flowers, cigarette butts and ring pulls into jewellery through layered resin and intricate silver fittings. Her pieces reframe overlooked materials as precious, inviting reflection on how we define beauty.

Emma Wilson creates jewellery inspired by the seascapes of Aberdeen, using fine silver, vitreous enamel, and gold detailing. Through traditional techniques like hand raising and wet packing, she produces kiln-fired pieces that evoke the textures and atmosphere of the coast.

Gabriele Gucci creates jewellery using the Mokume Gane technique, a traditional Japanese metalworking process that fuses layers of precious metals. Influenced by the aesthetic of wabi sabi, his pieces highlight natural variation, imperfection, and the organic patterns formed through handmade craftsmanship.

Genevieve Schwartz creates fine jewellery featuring bicolour gemstones set in precious metals. Her work is shaped by Art History, Art Deco geometry, and Impressionist colour theory, with bold combinations of hue central to her design approach.

Hannah Schofield explores sustainable materials and reimagines traditional stone carving techniques. Her work highlights the beauty of discarded materials, challenging ideas about which substances are considered worthy of intricate processes like lapidary and intaglio.

Holly O Hanlon’s work centres on pearls, reimagining their structural potential to challenge traditional forms and uses. She often employs Japanese lapidary blocks to slice and grind each pearl, pushing the material beyond conventional boundaries.

Imogen Burch blends traditional craftsmanship with bold reinterpretations of classic designs. Her work gives contemporary twists to familiar forms, such as signet rings featuring fallen crests.

IHB is a genderless jewellery brand founded by Iona Hindmarch Bisset, blending traditional craftsmanship with modern trends. Rooted in queer fashion, identity, and self-expression, the brand uses 100% recycled sterling silver and is committed to sustainable, ethically conscious practices.

Jet McQuiston’s work is inspired by the miniature, shaped by years of collecting small objects and a belief that even the tiniest forms can hold powerful stories. Her pieces weave together history, people, species and environments to preserve memory, echoing traditions from Byzantine to Victorian cultures. She uses responsibly sourced materials, including single mine origin gold, vitreous enamel and repurposed or ethically mined gemstones.

Joey Zhong is a London-based jewellery designer whose work explores themes of migration, memory, and identity, particularly her family’s journey from China to Australia. She uses gemstones and pearls as symbolic “seeds,” incorporating them through innovative weaving and wrapping techniques that rethink traditional stone setting.

Katherine Brunacci creates jewellery that blends ancestral traditions with contemporary design. Influenced by history and artifact discovery, she works with ethically sourced gemstones and recycled metals including 9ct gold, platinum, sterling silver and rock crystal to craft pieces that evoke themes of exploration and mythology.

Kristina Merchant creates temporary works from discarded materials that naturally return to the environment, drawing inspiration from Andy Goldsworthy’s use of impermanent, natural forms. Her work focuses on found amber, exploring its potential as a precious material in contemporary jewellery.

Martina Kocianova combines traditional techniques such as gem carving, hand engraving and stone setting with innovative materials like mushroom mycelium. From foraging fungi to cultivating mycelium, she integrates nature directly into her jewellery, blurring the line between organic matter and art. She studied Jewellery Design at Central Saint Martins and trained in traditional Japanese craft in Tokyo.

Designer duo Josephine Mass and Dabin Lee  met while studying at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. Their work draws on international perspectives, blending Mass’s Nordic simplicity and playful modernism with Lee’s Korean tradition of precise craftsmanship and detailed design.

Matthew Duepner is a jewellery designer from Greenwich Village with a background in engineering and design from Cooper Union, Pratt and FIT. His work explores both the physical beauty and symbolic meaning of metal, transforming it into pieces ranging from delicate necklaces to bold rings.

Megan Brown is an artist, jeweller and silversmith creating innovative designs rooted in traditional techniques. Her work is inspired by a rich family history that began over 180 years ago with her great great grandfather Herbert Brown, who established a jewellers and textile mill. Today, she continues that legacy through her own practice, Megan Brown Jewellery, working primarily with precious metals.

Mel Ocean Dario is a Swiss jewellery designer whose work explores the relationship between concept, material and form through a blend of digital and traditional techniques. Her collection REFLECTION translates sound vibrations into sand patterns, which are digitally modelled and crafted into pieces using steel and textured glass. Each design captures a physical expression of sound and emotion.

Miya Kumo is a London-based jewellery artist whose work blends arcane symbolism with a childlike sense of wonder. Working in gold and silver, they explore themes of illusion, duality and nature. Their pieces often feature engraved messages, emblems and figurines, reflecting a fascination with hidden meaning and layered storytelling.

Roanne Sanchez Watts is a London-based jeweller whose work centres on the completeness of rings, small narrative forms that gesture toward connection. Her pieces often tell emotionally resonant stories in a quiet, uncomplicated way.

Rosalie Carlier is a jewellery designer whose career spans both fine art and high fashion. After studying at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp and interning with Walter Van Beirendonck, she moved to Paris to design jewellery for Louis Vuitton. She has since created pieces for fashion houses including Jean Paul Gaultier, Jacquemus, Courrèges and Diesel.

Samantha Snow is a London-based designer behind S J Snow Jewellery. Inspired by ancient techniques and the wabi-sabi philosophy, she uses beeswax carving and lost-wax casting to create heirloom-style pieces from recycled metals and repurposed stones. Each purchase supports British bee conservation.

Seongmin Kim draws inspiration from the intimate bonds of motherhood and family, transforming these moments into symbolic, wearable forms that express care, warmth and connection. Working with pearls and mother of pearl, she creates refined jewellery that balances timeless elegance with thoughtful detail.

Siri Hansen is a Swedish jeweller and plasticsmith working primarily with plastic waste. Her work challenges traditional ideas of material value, viewing discarded plastics not as waste, but as a valuable resource to be reused.

Yiasemi necklaces are handcrafted from natural stones, gems, and minerals, with a focus on quality materials, international heritage, and the expression of individuality.