The deal closed this week, which means Instore will produce the JA NY show slated to take place this fall.
Are diamonds ready for their close-up?
I spent the bulk of Tuesday afternoon getting my schedule together for the big trip next week out to Las Vegas for the jewelry shows. While there’s a lot to be excited about, one of the appointments that’s most intriguing...
I spent the bulk of Tuesday afternoon getting my schedule together for the big trip next week out to Las Vegas for the jewelry shows.
While there’s a lot to be excited about, one of the appointments that’s most intriguing to me is my Saturday sit-down with the folks from diamond technology company Gemory LLC.
The topic at hand: their DiamondPure nano-photograph technology for diamonds.
Awhile back I wrote this cleverly headlined story about DiamondPure. But I still have a lot of questions about the technology, the main one being, will people actually be willing to pay for this service?
From what I gather, the basic idea behind DiamondPure is to make diamonds--which are heavily marketed as the perfect gifts to mark special events such as an engagement, an anniversary or a new baby--even more remarkable.
Buying your wife a 3-carat diamond pendant as a push present? Well, why not take it up a notch by putting a super-small picture of the new baby in the diamond.
The catch is that the picture, obviously, isn’t big enough to be seen by the naked eye and must be viewed using GemmaView, a portable viewing device from Gemory.
While the concept is cool, I just can’t picture diamond lovers parading around town with their own personal loupes, asking people to take a look at their wedding portrait shrunken onto a diamond.
But maybe I’m wrong.
Guess we’ll find out how many photo-enhanced diamonds have been sold so far when I meet with the Gemory people in Las Vegas.
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The new award, created in partnership with Henne Jewelers, honors the late designer’s legacy through supporting jewelry education.

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The NYPD is warning elderly New Yorkers to keep their jewelry hidden when walking outside to avoid being a target.

Designer Viviana Langhoff has realized her dream of owning a space for her Chicago jewelry store that looks and feels like her brand.

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Former Stephanie Gottlieb Fine Jewelry executive Morgan P. Richardson is joining the lab-grown diamond jewelry brand.

The $400 pocket watch is a blend of Audemars Piguet’s iconic eight-sided Royal Oak and Swatch’s unserious Pop watches from the ‘80s.

With gold prices on the rise, the “Modern Electrum” collection uses an alternative, non-tarnishing metal alloy composed of gold and silver.

Fruchtman Marketing has new owners, Erin Moyer-Carballea and Manuel Carballea, and will relocate to Miami.

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The jewel, circa 1890, is from the late Victorian era and was owned by descendants of the last high king of Ireland.

This is what the nine recipients plan to do with the funds.

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The discussion, "Rebuilding the Jewelry Workforce," will take place on Saturday, May 16, in Troy, Michigan.

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