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Alongside Anne's own work, the gallery also features the work of over 30 other makers with ranging materials and mediums.

Leoma Drew

Leoma Drew

The exploration of the butterfly’s shape and form led to small hand crafted sculptural outcomes that would later become Drew’s signature style within her Jewellery practice.

Sarah Packington

Sarah Packington

While studying Wood, Metal, Ceramics and Plastics BA (hons) at Brighton Polytechnic from 1988-1991 Sarah discovered the endless possibilities of cutting, texturing and dying plastics. It is a perfect material for jewellery as it is light and comfortable to wear.

Bea Jareno

Bea Jareno

Bea uses raw, textured, precious metals including sterling silver, yellow and white gold which she combines with carefully selected gemstones, beads and pearls. She sources her materials in the UK and fair trade gemstones making her pieces ethical with an optional fair trade gold. Her pieces are minimal, graceful and come in many beautiful colours.

Simon Harrison

Simon Harrison

The Simon Harrison team to create expressive, inspiring and accessible fashion jewellery that brings joy to those who wear it.

Suzie Horan

Suzie Horan

Suzie is fascinated by the movement and reflections of the sea and the shapes found in ammonites. These delicate and beautiful structures thread through each piece of her work by hammering, shaping and pressforming the metal. The resulting body of work is light, tactile and strong with interesting and beautiful reflections.

Beth Lamont

Beth Lamont

Beth Lamont is a ceramic jewellery and accessories Designer/Maker who is inspired by the clean form and feel of ceramics. She uses a parian porcelain ceramic material in a slip casting process creating shapes from hand carved forms.

Roberta Hopkins

Roberta Hopkins

Roberta textures the silver with vintage hammers that she has found in second-hand shops and antique fairs, and leaves it only lightly polished to maintain and organic, handmade quality. The semi-precious stones I choose for their natural, earthy colours and beautiful matte finish.

Kate Hodgson

Kate Hodgson

Kate specialises in the Victorian Flower Setting, where the metal is pulled over the stone to create tiny flower shapes, it’s a setting that has been handed through four sets of hands from the original Victorian craftsmen.

Elin Horgan

Elin Horgan

Elin Horgan Jewellery combines simple elegance and understated luxury to produce modern minimal pieces with maximum impact.

Katharine Daniel

Katharine Daniel

Hand designed and crafted from sustainably sourced Canadian diamonds.

Jane Crisp

Jane Crisp

Jane loves the qualities of natural materials like wool, wood, copper and brass and experiments with the mythologies of making amplifying traditional techniques in a contemporary way.

Jodie Hook

Jodie Hook

Jodie’s signature range entitled The Ribbon Collection is inspired by the moment you unravel a roll of satin ribbon, it twists and loops and as you lift it a knot forms. She manipulates the metal so it sits comfortably around the hand or body. Graphic clean lines feature strongly in Jodie’s work with influences including origami and fabric manipulation.

Holly Suzanna Clifford

Holly Suzanna Clifford

Encompassing ideas from outside the realm of jewellery, her work draws from illustration, great painters such as Monet and Klimt, and nature. Working in copper, silver & resins, she combines traditional skills with modern making techniques, to develop innovative collections of work.

Rebecca Burt

Rebecca Burt

Rebecca Burt Jewellery is a Cardiff based jewellery designer/maker creating decorative feminine jewellery. Working with precious metals and stones she forms abstractions of the natural world she sees around her.

Alice Barnes

Alice Barnes

Alice’s work is influenced by the cuts, folds and repetition used in paper art, and draws on lines, angles and repetitive shapes for inspiration.

Lucy Thompson

Lucy Thompson

Roma double oval pendants

Yen Jewellery

Yen Jewellery

Yen Duong expresses her passion for art and design through jewellery. The core of the design process is to create jewellery that embodies comfort and radiates confidence when the distinctive pieces are worn.

Dagmar Korecki

Dagmar Korecki

Working mainly in silver and gold Dagmar also uses precious and semi-precious stones with her designs. With the subtle and soft metal textures she employs combined with brilliant colours of gemstones, Dagmar creates an elegant visual balance.

Suzanne Claire

Suzanne Claire

Influenced by the world around, Suzanne Claire’s diverse collections are beautifully handcrafted in silver. By changing the original surface texture, each piece is individually enlivened.

Tanya Krackowizer

Tanya Krackowizer

Tanya gained a BA (Hons) in Jewellery from Middlesex University, set up her first studio in London and launched my first collection in 1997.

Kay Morgan

Kay Morgan

Kay Morgan is a contemporary designer maker who trained in Constructed Textiles (knit, weave and tapestry) and now makes leather bags, purses and jewellery. Although not trained in leather working, she likes to use leather working techniques and tools combined with her textile training to produce unusual, colourful and fun jewellery.

Stacey Bentley

Stacey Bentley

Minimalist architectural design and structure are primary sources of inspiration. Each piece of her jewellery originates from a photograph, drawing, or memory of a place she's travelled to.

Shirley Smith

Shirley Smith

Shirley Smith creates beautiful pieces using simple shapes and subtle textures. She is inspired by beach combing and time worn surfaces.

Rosita Bonita

Rosita Bonita

A life long love of drawing and making have equipped the designer with a unique visual language, teamed with an experimental and hands-on approach to materials and techniques, which have forged Rosita Bonita a distinct and alluring identity, charming customers, press & stockists ever since.

Jacks Turner

Jacks Turner

Jacks specialises in producing unique contemporary engagement rings that are design to sit seamlessly with their partnering wedding rings. Designed and handmade in her Bristol workshop, Jacks likes to work closely with her clients to produce beautiful bespoke jewellery that will be treasured for years to come.

Tania Clarke Hall

Tania Clarke Hall

Tania Clarke Hall is an award-winning jeweller working in leather. Influenced by her background in chemistry and a love of Japanese design, with its wabi-sabi aesthetic, Tania’s bold and dramatic pieces are designed with a deceptively simple economy of line. She delights in moulding, slashing, scorching and colouring the leather using experimental and innovative techniques that continually push the boundaries of her medium.

Diana Greenwood

Diana Greenwood

After graduating from the Royal College of Art with a Master’s Degree in Goldsmithing and Silversmithing in 1993, Diana set up her studio in London in 1994 with the aid of a Crafts Council Grant, successfully designing and making jewellery and silversmithing for shows and galleries, nationally and internationally.

Beth Pegler

Beth Pegler

Beth Pegler is a textile jewellery designer and maker working with rope, embroidery thread and macrame. Her colourful creations are made from 100% recycled cotton that complies with OKEO-TEX standard 100.

Shimara Carlow

Shimara Carlow

Shimara Carlow's work is inspired by nature, natural forms and seed heads. A childhood spent in a remote coastal area of West Cork nurtured her fascination for collecting shells, stones, mermaid’s purses, feathers and seed pods found along the sea shore, and formed the inspiration for her work.

Suzanna Hanl

Suzanna Hanl

A self-taught jeweller based in Yorkshire, all of her pieces are one-offs in silver and gold. Many are set with diamonds, pearls or unusual precious and semi-precious stones.

Ching Chin

Ching Chin

Anny Ching Chin Hsieh is a contemporary jeweller based in Bath/Bristol. She has been making and designing jewelry since 2009. Her work is influenced in principal by her previous architecture background, balancing proportion, intricate detail, texture, and colour. Her work is quirky yet elegant, seeking to match understated boldness with femininity.

Mim Best

Mim Best

Mim takes much of her inspiration from simple shapes, pattern, print and surface textures; always seeking to find interesting details and beauty in the banal. She is also fascinated with ancient and antique jewellery across all cultures from all over the world and finds this to be a continual source of inspiration.

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