Vintage jewelry: a little bit of history repeating
By Susan Carpenter, Los Angeles Times staff writer
The unadorned room that serves as the entrance to V Vintage is the ultimate fake-out. Take a few steps into this second-floor office-turned-boutique, hang a right through a white door and prepare to put on your sunglasses.
The jewelry is almost blinding.
Ringing the pale pink walls of this little jewel box of a shop are shelves full of thick gold chains that are, by turns, knotted, braided and linked. Bejeweled with overgrown teardrops and hearts sized almost to scale, theyre examples of the outrageous, over-the-top adornment that represents the best of the best in costume jewelry, from Lanvin and Mimi di N to Panetta, Chanel and Dior.
1970s Yves Saint Laurent gold leaf clip on earrings, $995.
On a recent weekday, Jill Garland was sampling some of her own merchandise. A large golden necklace festooned with geometric plates collared her slim neck. An ornate hinged bangle from Kenneth Jay Lane clasped her left wrist. A living model for some of the 300 pieces she sells from her discreet Beverly Hills shop, Garland is the co-founder of V Vintage a boutique thats been selling bedazzled baubles of the faux, but first, order for about a year.
1960s Cadoro turquoise emerald and rhinestone chandelier earrings, $895.
Though business isnt exactly booming, Garland says its remained fairly steady despite the countrys economic free fall. Costume jewelry, it seems, is dovetailing with larger societal trends to spend less money, but spend it on items that are high-quality, long-lasting, nostalgic, unique and green as in recycled. Its also the natural consequence of diminishing first-run clothing sales.
1950s Panetta bamboo with rhinestone drop earrings, $295.
People are not spending a lot of money on clothes. Everything looks the same anyway. The designs you have in Saks are at H&M a week later and at Forever 21 a week after that, so when youre accessorizing with something unique like vintage jewelry, you complete your look but you dont feel generic, said Garland, who sells mostly signed pieces (with a stamp on the back) in the $200 to $2,000 price range.
For those prices, all that glitters in Garlands shop clearly is not gold. What appears to be the $900-per-ounce precious metal is mostly gilded silver. The sparkly diamonds? Rhinestones. The turquoise? Baked enamel. Costume jewelry is just a polite way of saying fake. Its jewelry that does not contain precious metals or stones, though much of it is, nevertheless, dazzling. Its also a lot less expensive than buying fine (read: real) jewelry at retail prices.
Costume jewelry is still manufactured today, mostly in China, but its the pieces of a certain vintage that have value specifically the necklaces, bracelets, earrings, rings and brooches created from the 1920s to 1970s, when many European craftsmen came to the United States to ply their trade. (Antique is a term that is sometimes used to describe the baubles of bygone eras made from real precious metals and stones.)
Assembled by hand and made with non-precious materials, the pieces of earlier eras were often more experimental because their makers could afford to be. That craftsmanship and unique sense of style has made such designer names as Miriam Haskell, Trifari and Schiaparelli hot and collectible commodities from the runway down to the dressing room Haskell for the tapestry beading, Trifari for the elegance, Schiaparelli for the colorful sophistication.
Almost every maker had many different levels, said Julia C. Carroll, an avid collector who has written three books, Collecting Costume Jewelry 101, 202 and the soon-to-be-released 303. Only the pieces in good condition that were originally very high end and expensive at the time will get good money today.
What kind of good money? Thousands, though most collectors say fun and quality pieces can be had for as little as $25.
1970s Givenchy large-link necklace with glass stone, $595.
According to Joyce Jonas, a New York-based appraiser and jewelry expert, vintage jewelers tiers go something like this: Theres the top-of-the-line items that were extraordinarily designed, beautifully crafted, beautifully made. They had wonderful color and were full of life, said Jonas. The second tier was moderately priced and not as intriguingly designed. The third tier: throwaway.
So, just because a piece has a name like Haskell or Trifari doesnt meant its worth a whole lot. The things to look for: a signature, or stamp, on the back and a piece thats in good condition.
At least those are the things to look for if you care about vintage jewelry as an investment.
Increasingly, a lot of people do. High-quality vintage jewelry has shown consistent 10% to 15% annual gains in value, though many in the field are leery of the perception that its a safer haven for money than the stock market.
The price of gold goes up and down and diamonds are nuts right now, but vintage just sort of clicks along, said Jane Clarke, owner of Morning Glory Antiques & Jewelry, an online boutique that offers a lot of history along with its rhinestone eye candy. I think vintage jewelry is bought for the joy of it. The fact that if bought well, its been a pretty good historic investment, thats a plus. But the joy is what it is.
From left: 1970s Jomaz bamboo lapis and turquoise bracelet, $595; 1970s Ciner turquoise and lapis gold-tone bracelet, $375; 1970s Ciner turquoise and lapis rhinestone cuff, $575; and a 1960s Hattie Carnegie bamboo gold-tone bracelet, $375.
Ask any vintage jewelry fan, and theyll tell you: Wearing it makes you feel special. Not only are the pieces so unique that they garner compliments and questions, but theres also a sense of history and the pride of self-expression that can be used for a benefit much older than the pieces themselves flaunting what youve got.
Got cleavage? Plant a Boucher lily brooch right beside it.
Have pretty eyes? Color match them with a pair of Coro owl-face button earrings.
Neck like a swan? Try a triple-chain Goldette with Victorian cameo.
From left: vintage gold engraved metal cuff, $325; 1930s vintage horn and brass cuff, $375; 1970s vintage hinged wide cuff with rope detail, $225.
Like anything with fashion, its whatever works for you. But there are also general trends.
Whats hot right now are colorful, nostalgic statement pieces. At V Vintage, that means charm bracelets. At Morning Glory Antiques, its lockets. Theyre pieces that not only come from the past but also evoke ones own history. And thats often generational: Women buy what they saw their own mothers wearing.
That means boomers tend to buy colorful, ornate pieces from the 40s and the glittering, simple styles of the 50s, while Xers and Millennials gravitate toward the organic shapes of the 60s and ethnic styles of the 70s.
When people are upset, when they feel uneasy about whats going on in the world, they look back to a time when they felt secure, and for most people it was their childhood: What did I see around me at the time when I felt more comfortable than I feel today? said Clarke. The same thing happened during the Depression.