Good morning, my darlings! I’m so excited this day is finally here: I can’t wait to tell you all about Loriann Jewelry. The jewels are amazing, the designer is a delight…there’s nothing not glorious here.
Lori Ann Friedman isn’t new to the jewelry design game – her designs have been sold in the Mitchells family of stores for more than 14 years – but she says this new collection marks a major step forward for the brand in both scale and cohesive artistic vision. And they are gorgeous!
I had so much fun taking these pictures!
It happened in NYC a few weeks ago and it involved me, the lovely designer Lori, and her fabulous assistant for the day, Phoebe, in a hotel room full of jewelry. We talked about everything, from the intricacies of the designs to our love lives. We began with three bottles of rosé, involved piles of jewels, and ended in lots of Italian food.
Is the fact that Lori is a warm, loving, generous-hearted person with great taste in rosé strictly relevant to the appreciation of her jewelry? No. But isn’t it nice to know that the lady behind the designs is someone you’d want to be friends with?
Loriann Jewelry nails that difficult-to-achieve sweet spot between casual and formal: these designs, while often quite sizable, feel equally appropriate with jeans or a gown. They’re luxurious, but utterly unfussy. It’s an irresistible combination.
I’ve been looking forward to sharing these pieces with you since the very first time I saw a piece from Loriann Jewelry’s new collection, and I’m not the only one getting excited: Loriann Jewelry was recently chosen for the JANY Show’s coveted Mort Abelson New Designer of the Year award.
Here’s an opal ring from the same collection as the earrings I’m wearing in the photos above. Look at that luscious, glowing opal pebble!








What’s Jewelry Night Out?
I have no idea why it’s taken me so long to feature Acanthus. I’ve been following the designer, Nichole McIver,
This pendant is one of my very favorites. It’s beautiful, but it also feels like it represents something very specific and important, even though I’d be hard pressed to articulate exactly what.
A lot of dark jewelry – and by “dark” I mean both in color and in subject matter, i.e. snakes and swords and such, gives me a trying-too-hard feeling of HELLO HERE I AM, I AM A REBEL LOOK AT ME. There’s none of that here: these pieces are dark, yes, but in these designs it just feels right.