The singer’s ring ticks off many bridal trends, with a thick band, half-bezel setting, and solitaire diamond.
50 Jewelers/50 States: South Carolina
Croghan’s Jewel Box knows that, contrary to popular belief, mixing business and pleasure can be a great idea.

Charleston, S.C.--In 50 Jewelers/50 States, National Jeweler interviews one retailer in each of the 50 U.S. states to find out how they are meeting the challenges of the changing retail environment.
Sisters Rhett Ramsay Outten and Mariana Ramsay Hay are the third generation of their family to operate Croghan’s Jewel Box in Charleston, South Carolina, and the tradition has continued since Hay’s two daughters have come onboard to work at the company.
Ramsay Outten describes the atmosphere at the store as “like a cocktail party,” but any celebration is the result of a great deal of hard work. Croghan’s employs 25 people at its store, which has expanded over recent years to occupy the entirety of its historic Charleston building.
The original showroom is on ground level, while the second floor houses a workshop with four jewelers and a private area for special appointments and trunk shows, and the floor above that is dedicated to operations and the website.
“We try to be small,” said Ramsay Outten, “but we’ve grown a good bit over the last few years.”
She told National Jeweler how her family is keeping up with the demands of modern retail.

National Jeweler: What’s the biggest challenge your store is facing today?
Rhett Ramsay Outten: Customer service is our number one focus at all times. We’re lucky to live in a vibrant city that is a tourist destination. Charleston has been named a top travel destination consistently by publications like Condé Nast Traveler and Travel + Leisure, so we have an amazing non-local trade, so to speak, because we’re right in the middle of the historic town.
Customer service is the most important thing we offer, and it’s the thing we focus on constantly. We have a website, and we have lots of customers coming in and out of our door and the toughest challenge is to have the right staffing, the right employee in the right place at the right time, being able to give that customer service.
My grandfather started the
We’ve been really lucky, though. We have one employee who has been here 50 years, started as a teenager. So our retention rate is good. We just have to keep a website now and keep up with the times and keeping your staff up with the business I think is probably our biggest challenge.
NJ: What’s the top-selling category at your store?
RRO: Diamond rings.
NJ: What’s your top-selling brand?
RRO: We’re not really a brand-centered store. We do well with Henri Daussi. We do well with Single Stone. I would say that, behind diamond rings, our biggest seller is antique and estate jewelry. We do a large business with that. So Single Stone is one of those diamond companies that uses antique diamonds with new settings and that is a very good brand for us. We also do well with Temple St. Clair.
NJ: Describe your regional customer.
RRO: We are lucky because we have many fourth-generation customers to whom we’re selling a diamond ring and my grandfather sold to the first generation. Very often, we use the same diamond he sold, and we’ve reset it for three different generations, from platinum to yellow gold back to platinum and now we’re putting it in with a halo. So that’s very rewarding to have the longevity of a younger customer buying an engagement ring because we’ve all sort of grown up with the local customer.
Our website customer is generally aged 22 to 40 and our engagement ring customer is generally 25 to 35. But really we feel like if we do our job right selling an engagement ring to a young couple getting engaged, we hope that we’re serving them all the way through their lives for anniversaries and babies, so we really have quite a wide range of ages.
NJ: What’s the most popular style of engagement ring with your clientele now?
RRO: We sell a lot of antique engagement rings and then the solitaire is back. We’re selling a lot of solitaires. Cushion cuts have become very popular and round remains the number one (diamond shape). We’re seeing a few ovals come back; it’s become popular as well. Platinum is our most popular metal.

NJ: Which social media accounts are important to your business?
RRO: I would say Instagram. We try to post every day, really more than once a day, and it’s just really exciting to see that following grow and how that follower makes their way into Croghan’s from Minnesota and New York and Georgia. It’s such a national audience, and it’s the number one leader to our website and ecommerce.
NJ: Do you have e-commerce?
RRO: We instituted ecommerce in 2014. We work very hard on our website. We find e-commerce most useful as a tool for our customers to be able to go on the website and look at what’s available. We try to have our website give people a glimpse of who we are and what we have.
Our actual sales for larger items is not huge. However, there are very few people who walk in here ready to make an important purchase if they haven’t been on our website first--it’s more of a marketing and PR tool than a sales tool so far.
But it’s increasing constantly. Our growth in sales is tremendous each year. I think we doubled it this year from what we did last year so we see great potential there, though it’s not a big percentage of our sales so far.
A post shared by Croghan's Jewel Box (@croghans) on Aug 18, 2017 at 6:39am PDT
NJ: What’s the best piece of advice you’d offer to a fellow independent jeweler?
RRO: To have fun and make your store a place that makes people feel good. Between my sister and her two daughters and some of our employees who have been here a long time, it’s clear that everyone is having a good time and working hard.
Sometimes we say it’s like a cocktail party. There are many times when we pull out champagne and start offering people drinks when the line gets too long.
We’re so fortunate to work in an industry that provides things for happy milestones, and that radiates in our store. Have fun and laugh a lot because that is truly contagious, and it makes people feel comfortable.
NJ: What’s a fun fact about you we can share with our readers?
RRO: A fun fact is we call our employees “the jewels.” We enjoy doing things together like going to plays or baseball games or out to dinner together. We like to have fun!
The Latest

The bracelet references vintage high jewelry and snake symbolism as a playful piece where a python’s head becomes a working belt buckle.

The heist happened in Lebec, California, in 2022 when a Brinks truck was transporting goods from one show in California to another.

The Seymour & Evelyn Holtzman Bench Scholarship from Jewelers of America returns for a second year.

The 10-carat fancy purple-pink diamond with potential links to Marie Antoinette headlined the white-glove jewelry auction this week.


The Starboard Cruises SVP discusses who is shopping for jewelry on ships, how much they’re spending, and why brands should get on board.

The historic signet ring exceeded its estimate at Noonans Mayfair’s jewelry auction this week.

The countdown is on for the JCK Las Vegas Show and JA is pulling out all the stops.

To mark the milestone, the brand is introducing new non-bridal fine jewelry designs for the first time in two decades.

The gemstone is the third most valuable ruby to come out of the Montepuez mine, Gemfields said.

Founder and longtime CEO Ben Smithee will stay with the agency, transitioning into the role of founding partner and strategic advisor.

Associate Editor Natalie Francisco shares 20 of her favorite pieces from the jewelry collections that debuted at Couture.

If you want to attract good salespeople and generate a stream of “sleeping money” for your jewelry store, then you are going to have to pay.

The top lot was a colorless Graff diamond, followed by a Burmese ruby necklace by Marcus & Co.

Gizzi, who has been in the industry since 2001, is now Jewelers of America’s senior vice president of corporate affairs.

Luca de Meo, a 30-year veteran of the auto industry, will succeed longtime CEO François-Henri Pinault.

Following visits to Vegas and New York, Botswana’s minerals minister sat down with Michelle Graff to discuss the state of the diamond market.

The “Your Love Has the Perfect Ring” campaign showcases the strength of love and need for inclusivity and representation, the jeweler said.

The former De Beers executive is the jewelry house’s new director of high jewelry for the Americas.

The New York Liberty forward is the first athlete to represent the Brooklyn-based jewelry brand.

Take a bite out of the 14-karat yellow gold “Fruits of Love Pear” earrings featuring peridots, diamond stems, and tsavorite leaves.

The one-day virtual event will feature speakers from De Beers, GIA, and Gemworld International.

The California-based creative talks jewelry photography in the modern era and tackles FAQs about working with a pro for the first time.

Al Capone’s pocket watch also found a buyer, though it went for less than half of what it did at auction four years ago.

The foundation has also expanded its “Stronger Together” initiative with Jewelers for Children.

Assimon is the auction house’s new chief commercial officer.

The De Beers Group CEO discusses the company’s new “beacon” program, the likelihood diamonds will be exempt from tariffs, and “Origin.”