One of the very best things I did in NYC last week was to attend the Women’s Jewelry Association’s Awards for Excellence Gala for the very first time! It was a wonderful evening of women celebrating women – the whole room was filled with the most marvelous, supportive energy. And jewelry, of course. Lots and lots of jewelry.
Here I am with dinner table neighbor Hannah Becker of Diamondoodles, cheering wildly as Greenwich St. Jewelers accepts their award:
As soon as I accepted my invitation to the WJA Gala, I knew I’d have to bring some serious jewel power to the event. After all: what better way to celebrate women in jewelry than to showcase the work of Jane Taylor, one of my favorite jewelry-designing women?
Jane Taylor jewelry is actually a mother-daughter operation, run by founder and namesake Jane Taylor and her fabulous daughter, Cleo.
Jane and Cleo were kind enough to lend me some of my favorite Jane Taylor jewels to rock at the WJA gala. Jane couldn’t come herself, but the fabulous Cleo was basically my date for the night. Here we are posing prom-style at the beginning of the event! (Sorry if this is news to you…but I’m actually not very tall.)
Also among Cleo’s many talents: helping hapless bloggers who are caught in torrential downpours immediately before black tie events. (Trust me, I know.)
I could have gone for diamonds with my deep pink off-the-shoulder gown, but I wanted color. Which made Jane Taylor jewelry the perfect choice: glorious colored stones combined in unexpected ways is the brand’s signature style. I forgot to take many pictures during the actual event, but I’m going to give you a nice close look at all of the jewels.
First, my own jewels. I’m wearing my trusty wedding set, a late Art Deco diamond cocktail ring from Maejean Vintage, and a ChincharMaloney ring on my thumb. Everything else is Jane Taylor jewelry.
As soon as I knew I’d be working with Jane Taylor jewelry, I knew I wanted to wear as many of her glorious long gemstone earrings as possible. I ended up with one warm-colored pair and one cool-colored pair, to simultaneously complement the warm tones of my gown and also offer some contrast.