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The British fashion industry is valued at £21bn a year,
while UK fine jewellery is worth £3.2bn according to Mintel, the market
research group, so the scale of help for beginners is different.
Mr
Webster is involved with LFW as the curator of Rock Vault, a showcase
for rising jewellers who already have a flourishing business.
“Seven have accepted and it will be great exposure for them, with more impact from showing their great talent as a group.”
It
is, he says, an experiment that he hopes will flourish because a
consistent presence is seen as important by potential buyers.
“You
have to go back to any trade fair several times before you sell,”
agrees designer William Cheshire, who has been on trade missions to
France and Germany and has just opened his first shop in east London’s
up-and-coming Broadway Market.
There are a number of useful
small-scale initiatives to support young designers from graduation
onwards, but they are concerned mainly with the home market, and channel
young designers towards one of several disparate exhibitions.
International
Jewellery London (IJL) in September, Rock Vault at Fashion Week and the
Jewellery Show (in Birmingham in February and London in June) are
entirely trade while London Jewellery Week, in venues across the
capital, sells direct to the customer as does the Goldsmiths Fair, also
for bespoke commissions, in late September. Goldsmiths also now runs a
selling fair for younger designers and clients, this year in late June.
This
fragmented structure is, says one observer, “due to vested interests”,
and the support structure, though wide ranging, is equally fragmented.
Mr
Cheshire says he received “quite brilliant” help from Holts Academy’s
Design Competition, and that such private sources are essential since
public funding has now all but dried up.
The Holts competition
channels designers towards IJL, as does Bright Young Gems (backed by the
British Jewellers’ Association), which mentors and gives show space to
recent graduates and is being extended nationally, and Kickstart, which
helps designers who already have a fledgling business.
Della
Tinsley, director of London Jewellery Week, says: “We are giving space
to young talents at each of our venues, which all have their own
character, from the established and design-orientated at Treasure
[jewellery show], young and edgier at Jewel East in Spitalfields and
more craft style at Greenwich Market.”
Winner of a free stand at
Treasure is Lestie Lee, who has also benefited from the Kickstart
programme. Both IJL and London Jewellery Week are working with starter
programmes around the country, such as the Vanilla Ink incubator
workshop in Scotland.
Bec Astley Clarke, the successful online
jewellery entrepreneur, agrees that “we have a responsibility to put
something back – young designers are dependent on private initiatives
now”.
She has set up a new mentoring award in all aspects of the
industry for graduates with Holts and gives a Gold Award to a chosen
“Bright Young Gem” to collaborate on a project with her brand.
The
Goldsmiths’ Centre, which opened a year ago in purpose-built premises
funded by Goldsmiths’ Company, houses 15 established businesses
alongside low-rent starter studios for graduates and the week-long
Getting Started courses that the company has run for 30 years.
It
is, says director Peter Taylor, “still embryonic, but designers here
get an overview and experience of all aspects of the industry. There are
craftsmen training as well as designers and CAD [computer-aided design]
experts – everything to help the future of a British industry which
still has its skills.”
But he regrets “the lack of coherent
strategy on tackling the global market over the past five or so years.
We have become more focused on bespoke work here, though that is also
positive.”
Imogen Belfield, who did a Goldsmiths Getting Started
course and has received both Bright Young Gems and Kickstart awards,
shows her designs at Rock Vault and is joining the Vegas trip. “I’ve had
a lot of help all through, first with understanding the business, then
with exhibition stands, press material and so on”, she says.High quality
stainless steel necklace chain with durable color.
“I’ve had backing from the BFC [the British Fashion Council which has UK Trade & Investment money], through Rock Vault”.
Now,
she says, she feels ready to export and would like to join the upmarket
Première Classe show in Paris, but cannot afford it.
Meanwhile
IJL, which last year attracted buyers from 64 countries, is in
discussion with another Vegas fair, JCK, about a reciprocal arrangement.
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