Even jewelry becomes sustainable

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muniyaakter
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Joined: Tue Jan 07, 2025 4:34 am

Even jewelry becomes sustainable

Post by muniyaakter »

Major jewelry brands have recently created new senior management positions focused on ensuring the sustainability of every part of the company.

Here are some examples: Katerina Reilly , global sustainability specialist at Tifanny , and Maïlys Mantel , sustainability project manager at Cartier .

Sustainability tops the list of the biggest opportunities in 2023 for top fashion executives globally.

To succeed in 2023, companies will need to continue to adapt to increasingly ethical and sustainability - conscious consumers .

The revolution will also affect the production materials slovenia consumer mobile number list while metals, precious stones and pearls have been the cornerstones of jewellery design for centuries, today inspiration also comes from the most unusual materials, such as glass, cow horn and wood .

We could give you the example of Eun Seok Han , an artisan from Seoul who has been creating rings and other jewelry from recycled cans since 2020.

Or Adele Dejak , a Kenyan designer who, among other materials, also uses recycled Ankole cow horns to create jewelry inspired entirely by the African continent.

Eliza Walter, on the other hand, produces jewelry from waste metals from objects such as cell phones or computers.

Then there are those, like Emily P. Wheeler , a Los Angeles designer, who creates jewelry from salvaged ebony, recycled gold, and lab-grown gems (her creations can cost up to $119,000).

And laboratory-grown crystals seem to be one of the guiding lines of the future towards sustainable jewelry.

A diamond born in the laboratory
The extraction of minerals and precious stones such as diamonds has a devastating impact on the ecosystems in which it is done.

Luckily, in this case science comes to our rescue:
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