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Tom Binns, Q + A

Tom Binns

When I first opened dresscode by gita, I knew I had to have Tom Binns’s jewelry collection. Being a fan form the 80′s  ! made an appointment to view the collection at the Crillion Hotel. Tom opened the door and said ” Your and old face !” Yes to that I felt I was in the moment with Tom. As Paris Fashion Week is hard on ones feet I took my shoes off to walk the collection and so did Cristina but as Vogue walked in we quickly slipped them on.

Here is an insight to Tom Binns. I am sure by the end of the 10 questions you be a fan of Tom Binns. It’s hard to resist the witty, talented Irish Man !!!

 

10 Questions with Jewelry Designer Tom Binns

Cavan Sieczkowski 12/24/2011
International Business Times

“You were born in Belfast, North Ireland, and you went to school in London. Are you a UK punk rocker at heart? 

No, I am a man of the world now. I guess the abrasiveness of being Irish and working class, the push to become successful is harder so you’re always up against something or other. Punk rock in not really the fuel for my creative obstruction it was more about the great artists who questioned what went before and tried to challenge. In the struggle to challenge you really are at war with convention and I love punk rock and the punk rockers because it was a great movement. My dear friend, Malcolm McLaren, instigated a lot of it and he was a great influence in my life.

Your vision is unlike any other. We have to ask – where do you find the inspiration?

Somewhere behind my blue eyes my inspiration comes. It comes from many difference sources; art, politics, nature, economics, cinema, poetry. The one thing is doesn’t come from is fashion, the dead art. Inspiration is your philosophy. It is a combination of everything you take in and its an interpretation of that, it is constantly moving and constantly changing.

All of your jewelries are unique yet there is a thread that unifies them all. Do your designs shift based on mood or season?

It has been said that I am a difficult man, but I think I’m quite pleasant, so how wrong can you be? The thing is…one of my girl friends said this, “I love you because its like waking up with a different man every morning.” Things constantly change and it transforms into your work. I would hate to be constant, like one of those French guys that never change their haircut. I’m not that kind of bloke. Its a challenge to compete in one’s self, it keeps me in a state of constant flux so nothing is safe.

When designing, do you imagine what outfit a woman might wear with your jewelry?

Hopefully nothing at all. Clothes are the new accessories. I have to thank the designers for the lovely frocks that go with my jewelry.

You recently created printed tees for Matches. Do you have any plans to eventually create a full fashion line?

I wold love to do all kinds of things, but I am a bit stretched fighting off the wolves. What we have created here, dare I call it a ‘brand’ but the look we have created here would be easy to interpret into all kinds of product. We are a small independent company and it is difficult to dabble in to all these different arenas but the ideas are strong enough… how difficult can it be?!

As a high-end designer, would you ever consider developing a capsule collection, a la Versace for H&M?

I am not against it but we have not yet had the opportunity. There are many interpretations of my ideas out there by who knows who. I would like the opportunity to exploit the ideas that I have been working on for the past 30 years.

Tom Binns’ fans run the gamut from Lady Gaga to Michelle Obama. Can you describe an archetypal Tom Binns woman?

She is a woman who exudes independence and can step up to the plate to take it on and not care what people think. Someone who knows how to radiate as beauty radiates, it is not obvious. It is much deeper than that and if I can lend my work to the sparkle of a woman’s presence that I find very rewarding.

Your partner, Cristina Viera Newton, was a former model and fashion executive. Is your relationship more yin and yang or Bonnie and Clyde?

No, its more itchy and scratchy. She encourages me and eases the pressure of the constant irritation of life which allows me to function creatively.

If you had to choose, what song would you pick as the title track to represent the Spring 2012 collection?

It would be a song from The Cure called, ‘In Between Days’

Do you have a favorite piece? 

Well, there was this Italian girl in a movie that I’ve seen recently, she is my favorite piece.”

 

December 19, 2011 — Category: News

Elizabeth Taylor’s Jewelry Legacy

“The importance of the jewelry is emotional and psychological. Nobody ever owns anything this beautiful. . . . We are only the guardians’”

The more than 500 lots that Christie’s will auction on December 13 to 14; the estimated sales of $30 million will benefit the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation.

Elizabeth Taylor began with a gold-plated posy brooch in a boutique at the Beverly Hills Hotel (where her father owned an art gallery), and saved up her allowance to buy it to her mother surprise. The men in her life fed her insatiable passion for jewels especially Michael Todd and Richard Burton. Taylor’s collection records the trends in jewelry and at the same is filled with commemorative, historical and whimsical pieces.

dresscodebygita.com’s client Amy NewHall, a jewelry collector herself was invited to preview Elizabeth Taylor’s Collection at Christies, NYC.

Amy Newhall: “A world class collection, and to think she wore it all”

Here are a few pieces that caught Amy’s eye.

 

 

ELIZABETH TAYLOR DIAMOND
33-carat. Burton paid $305,000 for the 33.19-carat Harry Winston ring in 1968.

Elizabeth Taylor: “This remarkable stone is called the Krupp diamond because it had been owned by Vera Krupp, of the famous munitions family that helped knock off millions of Jews,” wrote Taylor. “When it came up for auction in the late 1960s, I thought how perfect it would be if a nice Jewish girl like me were to own it. In truth, though, there’s nothing funny about the Krupp. When I look into it, the deep Asscher cuts—which are so complete and ravishing—are like steps that lead into eternity and beyond. With its sparks of red and white and blue and purple, and on and on, really, it sort of hums with its own beatific life. To me, the Krupp says, ‘I want to share my chemistry—my magic—with you.’”

Amy Newhall: “ Truly magnificent “

LA PEREGINA PEARL
The Legendary Pearl A 16th Century Pearl Ruby and Diamond Necklace designed by Elizabeth Taylor, with Al Durante of Cartier Gift from Richard Burton. La Peregrina one of the most important historic pearls. Prince Philip II of Spain was among the first recorded owners of the pearl and it later passed on to the Spanish queens Margarita and Isabel, who wore the pearl in 17th century portraits by Velázquez. Taylor once lost it in her hotel suite at Caesars Palace.

Elizabeth Taylor: “I heard one of the puppies chewing a bone, And I thought, that’s wrong, we don’t give the puppies bones. One of the dogs had the pearl in his mouth. Thank God there were no scratches. “

Amy Newhall: ”After the Elizabeth Taylor diamond this was my favorite. I hope it stays in America”

BOW BROOCH, VAN CLEF and ARPELS

Amy Newhall: ”It’s about the craft. The craftsmen are no longer around. You will never see this work again”

 

CHARM BRACELET

Taylor collected charms for her many bracelets. As a teen Taylor wore a charm bracelet. A sentimental record of her marvelous life. A piece of jewelry we all can create ourselves.

Amy Newhall: “It is so important to document one’s life. A perfect way to record it. Charm bracelets never go out of style.”

Taylor’s life has been well recored as the Queen of Hollywood, crowned by Michael Todd with a ninth century tiara. She has left a truly honorable legacy, the eternal guardian angel to Aids victims.

 

Sources:
My Love Affair with Jewelry, Elizabeth Taylor
Christies

 


December 7, 2011 — Category: News