Cora Sheibani

The timeless sweets of Cora Sheibani

Sweets and ice creams, or flower vases and cacti for Cora Sheibani. The London-based designer has created jewelery collections inspired by the most diverse motifs. One is called Copper Mold and is inspired by old, metal cake molds, periodically renewed. It seems made especially for those who love to indulge in the pleasure of a slice of cake or pudding. The molds seem to generate a series of desserts of various kinds, from ice cream to puddings, which in reality are hand-carved hard stones such as opal, tiger’s eye obsidian, on which in some cases other small stones are applied as if they were decorations on a cake . Creams and chocolate, in short, become elegant rings that have the only flaw of stimulating the appetite. And not in a manner of speaking: the designer has also published a recipe book to accompany the collection (she, however, maintains an enviable silhouette).

Cupcake RIng, con oro rosa, opale rosa e spinelli
Cupcake RIng, with rose gold, pink opal and spinels

Another collection, however, takes inspiration from the flower vases admired during a trip to Italy. Yet another to thorny plants such as cacti, or to dinosaur eggs. In short, the motifs are truly unusual and the result is surprising.
Cactus cocktail ring, in oro bianco e granati viola
Cactus cocktail ring, in white gold and purple garnets

Cora Sheibani, in fact, knows the world of sweets well, since she was born in Switzerland, a country considered the homeland of chocolate. But thanks to the family environment in which she grew up (with her art dealer parents) she was surrounded with a passion for beauty, as evidenced by a degree in Art History from New York University. In January 2001, while studying Renaissance and pre-Raphaelites, Cora Sheibani decided that she wanted to design jewelry. In 2002 she graduated in gemology from London’s Gia and launched her eponymous label. She is also a design enthusiast and has published a book from her Valence collection with text by the Italian designer Ettore Sottsass, one of her first supporters.

Anello Dino, in oro giallo e opale
Dino ring, in yellow gold and opal
Orecchini a clip con pietra luna brown e perle di zaffiri
Clip earrings with brown moonstone and sapphire pearls
Italian Pot ring in titanio
Italian Pot ring in titanium
Orecchini Saturn con acquamarina e diaspro
Saturn earrings with aquamarine and jasper
Green Pudding Ring, con opale verde e zaffiro blu
Green Pudding Ring, with green opal and blue sapphire
Gugelhupf Ring, con occhio di tigre e diamante orange
Gugelhupf Ring, with tiger’s eye and orange diamond
Anello in oro rosa, calcedonio, cacholong
Ring in rose gold, chalcedony, cacholong
Strawberries and cream ring, con rodocrosite e zaffiro bianco
Strawberries and cream ring, with rhodochrosite and white sapphire

Guide to new trendy earrings




Strange forms, new names: learn to recognize the different types of trendy earrings. Quick guide ♦

Have you ever wanted to buy earrings on Etsy, Asos or eBay and feel a bit confused between earcuff, wrap-around and wire? Blame vocabulary: once there were only three models of the jewel more loved by women, stud, hoop and pendant. Then, came the chandelier, an elaborate variation of cascading earrings, but nothing has been the same again after the appearance of the ear cuff.

Orecchini della collezione Eyes, indossati di Cora Sheibani
Orecchini della collezione Eyes, indossati di Cora Sheibani

And so for a few years every season here comes a new version, with a few more details, maybe a little wire on the back of the lobe, or an item that dangles in front and behind, or chains that make the first earcuff seem a traditional object. Here is a glossary with the explanation of each style, taking into account the real novelty are ear jackets, while the most embellishing are climbing earrings. If they are also a bit pendant, is the ultimate trendy.

Earcuff band Will appeal to those who faints at the sight of the needle because it is the only model of earrings that does not require piercing: in fact it comes to bands decorated with stones or thin opened circles to overlap along the top of ear. And often they cost less than all the others.

1 Stone, oro rosa 18 carati e diamanti. 2 Maria Francesca Pepe, ottone placcato oro e perla. 3 Bjørg, argento placcato oro. 4 First People First, ottone con tre coni.
1 Stone, oro rosa 18 carati e diamanti. 2 Maria Francesca Pepe, ottone placcato oro e perla. 3 Bjørg, argento placcato oro. 4 First People First, ottone con tre coni.

Ear chain Modern bohemian, is very Coachella style (the musical event that takes place in late April in Indio, California) with its chain that starts from the top of the lobe and goes to end in the piercing. You can match it with more ear band cuff stacked on cartilage.

1 Ileana Makri, orecchino ear cuff in oro rosé 18kt con diamanti, zaffiri e tsavorite. 2 Lara Bohinc, orecchini con rodio.
1 Ileana Makri, orecchino ear cuff in oro rosé 18kt con diamanti, zaffiri e tsavorite. 2 Lara Bohinc, orecchini con rodio.

Ear jackets Similar to wrap around as a concept, these earrings are focused in the lobe and have a front end that can be a stud or a horizontal bar and something more intricate and the real highlight comes out from the back and hugs the curve of the lobe as a semicircle.

1 Niko Koulis, oro nero 18 carati diamanti blu. 2 Perlota, oro bianco e giallo18 carati e ovali con diamanti bianchi pendenti. 3 Sidney Evan, accessorio per ear jacket in oro giallo 14 carati e diamanti grigi. 4 Ca&Lou, metallo e strass colorati.
1 Niko Koulis, oro nero 18 carati diamanti blu. 2 Perlota, oro bianco e giallo18 carati e ovali con diamanti bianchi pendenti. 3 Sidney Evan, accessorio per ear jacket in oro giallo 14 carati e diamanti grigi. 4 Ca&Lou, metallo e strass colorati.

Ear stud double sided Variation on the theme: the form is replicated on the back in a bigger size. Wear it with other models.

1 Vita Fede, ottone placcato oro e cristalli Swarovski. 2 Yoko London, orecchini in oro rosa e diamanti con due perle Tahiti grigie. 3 Dior Tribale, orecchini in palladio con pavé di cristalli grigi e perla ricoperta in resina rosa.
1 Vita Fede, ottone placcato oro e cristalli Swarovski. 2 Yoko London, orecchini in oro rosa e diamanti con due perle Tahiti grigie. 3 Dior Tribale, orecchini in palladio con pavé di cristalli grigi e perla ricoperta in resina rosa.

Ear stud hoop Neither fish nor fowl, you might say. And, instead, are a combination of the two that makes a classic hyper modern: the button front and the unfinished circle that extends from the back.

1 Luxory Fashion, metallo e cristalli Swarovski. 2 Maria Francesca Pepe, ottone e strass. 3 CZ by Kenneth Jay Lane, ottone e zirconi.
1 Luxory Fashion, metallo e cristalli Swarovski. 2 Maria Francesca Pepe, ottone e strass. 3 CZ by Kenneth Jay Lane, ottone e zirconi.

Ear wire It is a jewel that requires a piercing with a wire which passes behind the ear to be well positioned along the cartilage. The result is a jewel looking ethereal, delicate and floating.

1 Perlota, oro bianco 18 carati e diamanti bianchi. 2 Cristina Ortiz, oro rosa 9 carati e diamanti brown. 3 Sophie Bille Brahe, oro giallo 18 carati e pietre multicolore.
1 Perlota, oro bianco 18 carati e diamanti bianchi. 2 Cristina Ortiz, oro rosa 9 carati e diamanti brown. 3 Sophie Bille Brahe, oro giallo 18 carati e pietre multicolore.

Ear wrap-around More elaborate than their cousins, is wrapped behind the ear with an end hanging from the front on top of the ear and another, often more conspicuous or larger and with a greater amount of stones, which comes out from the back at the bottom of the earlobe.

1 Vickisarge, metallo placcato palladio con Swarovski. 2 Delfina Delettrez, oro 9 carati, 9 topazi multicolore e un peridoto. 3 Vibe Harslof, metallo dorato con due perle bianche. 4 Emanuele Bicocchi, argento con strass.
1 Vickisarge, metallo placcato palladio con Swarovski. 2 Delfina Delettrez, oro 9 carati, 9 topazi multicolore e un peridoto. 3 Vibe Harslof, metallo dorato con due perle bianche. 4 Emanuele Bicocchi, argento con strass.







GemGèneve Designer Vivarium is back




After announcing the return (after the pandemic break year), GemGèneve outlines the contours of the third edition (4-7 November). In particular, the organizers of the Geneva event presented the new exhibitors at the Designer Vivarium, a space reserved for the creators of fine jewelry, small boutiques often made up of a single jeweler. The Vivarium Designer is curated by Vivienne Becker with the contribution of Ida Faerber, one of the leading experts in the world of jewelery, and includes a range of extraordinarily original and innovative contemporary jewelery. A space that, in a certain sense, is an alternative to that of the rest of the exhibitors, focused on precious stones, high-end proposals from exclusive Maison and vintage jewelery.

Il PalaExpo che ospita GenGenève
Il PalaExpo che ospita GenGenève

I look for jewels that have a strong, individual point of view, a well-defined identity and a creative vision, and for a certain artisan refinement. I am looking for a sophisticated integration of concept, material and technique and perhaps above all I am looking for designers who have something to say, something new to say, through their jewels. I am looking for the creators of today who will be part of the long and rich continuum of the history of jewelry.
Vivienne Becker

Vivienne Becker. Photo: G.Maillot
Vivienne Becker. Photo: G.Maillot

Vivarium, on the other hand, offers avant-garde jewelry: an idea originally born by the founders of GemGenève, Thomas Faerber and Ronny Totah, perhaps to infuse a breath of freshness that balances a very traditional event. The designers participating in this edition are Aline Debusigne (Switzerland), Regina Gambatesa (Italy), Studio Renn (India), Atelier Allure (Austria), G Suen (Great Britain), Alexandra Jefford (Great Britain), Cora Sheibani (Great Brittany), Alexander Tenzo (Russia).

Alexander Tenzo. Copyright: gioiellis.com
Alexander Tenzo. Copyright: gioiellis.com

Cora Sheibani
Cora Sheibani







Cora Sheibani shines in the dark





The fluorescent and phosphorescent rings by Cora Sheibani: in the dark they shine more ♦ ︎

Jewels that become works of art, or works of art that become jewels? You choose. The idea of ​​Glow, the first exhibition of designer Cora Sheibani, attracted both the attention of the art world and of women who would gladly wear fluorescent rings, earrings and bracelets. In fact, even the most extraordinary jewel in the dark can no longer be seen, a real pity. A fluorescent gem, on the other hand, becomes a bright star in the dark.

Bracciale in oro bianco e tormalina, anello in oro rosa e zaffiro rosa
Bracciale in oro bianco e tormalina, anello in oro rosa e zaffiro rosa

So Cora Sheibani, a London designer, has made jewelry that has incredible properties: they emit light of another color while they are exposed to ultraviolet (Uv) lighting. The jewels were then exhibited in London and in the prestigious Louisa Guinness Gallery hosted at the Colnaghi Gallery in New York. The darkness, in this case, was used to see better the fluorescent and phosphorescent minerals found by the British designer after a long search. For example, the bright pink spinels of the Mansin mine in Burma are called Jedi spinels by local traders because their strong fluorescence is reminiscent of the Star Wars lightsabers. Even many diamonds (about 30%) have a fluorescence, which can be detected with particular light conditions.

Also read: The hidden light of diamonds

Fluorescence and phosphorescence are a significant feature of some gems, a quality that is often overlooked but I believe it should be used as a design feature.
Cora Sheibani

Cora Sheibani. Copyright: gioiellis.com
Cora Sheibani. Copyright: gioiellis.com

The jewels, in any case, have been designed with particular attention to how the colors appear even in normal lighting conditions. They simply have an extra luminous dimension when it is night. In the Sheibani style, they have been completely designed and manufactured with the highest quality, mainly in Switzerland, but also in France, Germany and the United Kingdom.




Anelli della collezione Glow
Anelli della collezione Glow

 

Orecchini di Cora Sheibani
Orecchini di Cora Sheibani
Anello Small Eye con diamante beige
Anello Small Eye con diamante beige
Anello Small Cactus in oro giallo con tsavorite e orecchini in oro rosa con giada lavanda e smeraldi
Anello Small Cactus in oro giallo con tsavorite e orecchini in oro rosa con giada lavanda e smeraldi

Spilla Cloud e Skyline in oro bianco 18 carati con diamanti fluorescenti
Spilla Cloud e Skyline in oro bianco 18 carati con diamanti fluorescenti







GenGèneve’s second chance





GemGèneve includes gems, designers, vintage jewelery, diamonds and … The second edition starts ♦ ︎

Started in 2018 as an adventure on which not many were ready to bet, GemGèneve returns (9-12 May) with more exhibitors and with a series of collateral events that certify its vitality.
For example, Elizabeth Fischer together with Vivienne Becker will address the issue of the relationship between jewelery design and contemporary society. Another meeting is dedicated to Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, explorer, adventurer, merchant and narrator of his wanderings, who helped develop the knowledge of elsewhere in Europe and the taste for precious stones. In short, an articulated and fully organized fair.

GemGenève, insieme di booths
GemGenève, insieme di booths

And so, the idea of ​​two jewelers, Thomas Faerber and Ronny Totah, tired of the Basel formula, could have had an uncertain destiny. Instead it seems a success. The second edition of GemGenève sees the presence of around 200 exhibitors, with a large presence of those who buy and sell precious gems, diamonds, and even vintage jewelry. But not only.
Interesting, for example, the two sections dedicated to emerging designers, with Ena Iro, Horowicz Fine Jewelery, Pierre d’Alexis and Syz Firework, and the Design Vivarium area, with the presence of Alexandra Jefford, Cora Sheibani, Milio, Ming, Mr. Lieou, Nadia Morgenthaler, Ninotchka, Racine Geneva, Sean Gilson, Tatiana Verstraeten, Tenzo. Monica Battistoni





Vetrina a GemGenève
Vetrina a GemGenève

Acquamarina da 130 carati e morganite di Nomads
Acquamarina da 130 carati e morganite di Nomads

GemGenève, vetrina di Dover Jewelry & Diamonds
GemGenève, vetrina di Dover Jewelry & Diamonds

GemGenève, visitatori
GemGenève, visitatori

GemGenève 2018
GemGenève 2018

La vetrina di Robert Procop con i gioielli disegnati da Angelina Jolie
La vetrina di Robert Procop con i gioielli disegnati da Angelina Jolie







11 designers for GemGenève

The 11 independent jewelers who will participate in the Designer Vivarium, at GemGenève ♦ ︎

It is called Designer Vivarium: a name that recalls a space dedicated to a species cataloged by the natural sciences, but which is instead an area of GemGenève for independent jewelers. And so, yes, the independent designers are a strange species, even if unknown to the heirs of Darwin. The fair, in its second edition, will be held from 9 to 12 May at the Geneva Palaexpo. And, like last year, it will reserve an area for small innovative brands: a space that has been at the center of visitors’ interest. The Designer Vivarium was curated by the jewelery expert Vivienne Becker, and has been expanded to include more designers. Here are the 11 brands that will exhibit their jewelry at GemGenève 20198.

Nicholas Lieou
Born and raised in Hong Kong, he studied in Europe, taking a masters degree in London at the prestigious Royal College of Art, before working for major jewelers in London and New York. He is a cerebral and passionate designer, who mixes a scholarly approach with art and imagination to revitalize the classicism of high jewelery. For example, in jewelry inspired by the myth of Daedalus, with diamonds in the shape of stylized wings.

Nicholas Lieou
Nicholas Lieou

Alexandra Jefford
Designer born in Geneva, based in London, which draws on his artistic training to create jewelry deeply considered modernists of powerful line and bold form, color and consistency, often incorporating the engraving of the illustrator that was his specialty. Contrasts darkness and light.
 Alexandra-Jefford
Alexandra Jefford

Ming Lampson
Known simply as Ming, he is a private “secret” London jeweler who was born in Hong Kong and learned about the gems in Jaipur. He launched his company in 1998, mainly to focus on custom jewelry. In the last two years, he has created his first two themed collections, blending his Asian roots with refined western craftsmanship.
Ming Lampson
Ming Lampson

Milio
This is a mother and daughter duo from Moscow: Lyudmila and Olga maintain the Russian culture through the use of refined gems and stone carvings, balancing at a certain nostalgic romanticism with a timeless modernism inspired by the Art Deco.
Tatiana Verstraeten
She is a designer of accessories and costume jewelery of Belgian origin, which emerges from behind the scenes of the Parisian fashion elite. Tatiana launched its first high jewelery collection during the last Paris Couture in January.

Tatiana Verstraeten
Tatiana Verstraeten

Nadia Morgenthaler
Designer and jeweler based in Geneva, she was already present last year. She has an unmistakable style, which blends architectural details with an almost Victorian romanticism.
Alexander Tenzo
Extraordinary Russian gemologist, restorer, engraver, stone sculptor, creates cameos, carvings and complex carvings, with jewels and slowly revealing their fascinating secrets.
Alexander Tenzo
Alexander Tenzo

Sean Gilson
American goldsmith artist who makes every jewel by hand with pearls and gold, in a modernist geometric and graphic look.
Ninotchka
Duo of young and dynamic Russian designers, who deepens the tradition with precious stones, often ancient and coming from the Urals, to create fantastic ornaments with rich cultural references.
Cora Sheibani
Designer born in Switzerland and based in London, she grew up in the art world. He uses his innate sense of line, form and color to break the jewel rules and explore completely new spaces.

Cora Sheibani
Cora Sheibani

Racine Osieri
Husband and wife, the emerging talent of the GemGenève section of last year, enters the Designer Vivarium with pavé, a blend of harmonies or surprising contrasts.




GemGenève 2018
GemGenève 2018

La vetrina di Robert Procop con i gioielli disegnati da Angelina Jolie
La vetrina di Robert Procop con i gioielli disegnati da Angelina Jolie
Gioielli d'epoca
Gioielli d’epoca

Il PalaExpo che ospita GenGenève
Il PalaExpo che ospita GenGenève







The eyes of Cora Sheibani

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The new collection of Cora Sheibani is called Eyes and it is a pleasure to watch it ♦ ︎
When she was four, Cora Sheibani lets you know that she was painting in a garage with Jean-Michel Basquiat. On his website he also reports a flattering judgment of the Italian designer Ettore Sottsass: «When Cora Sheibani decided to design jewelry, she did not opt ​​for pounds of gold, volumes, complications, golden baroque with the addition of more or less precious or poor stones diamond surfaces to pursue the unattainable mythology of luxury “. Art and design: the bread that Cora has eaten since birth. She is the daughter of the Zurich art dealer Bruno Bischofberger and his wife Christina (known to all as Yoyo). The house, in addition to Basquiat, was frequented by artists of all kinds, starting with Andy Warhol. When she turned eight, just to understand, she chose for her bedroom a colorful chair of the Memphis Group, the postmodern design collective of Milan founded in 1981 by Sottsass, who was a friend of the family.
All this creative air that she breathed during her growth, Cora transferred it to her work as a jewelry designer. After studying art history in Florence and New York, she moved to London in 2001 and moved to London where married Kaveh Sheibani, a financier. She meet customers by appointment only. His latest collection is called Eyes and summarizes well the spirit of his extreme design, no frills but at the same time rich. The jewels have a rather large size, they are in gold with central stones like tanzanite, garnet, spessartite, pink rubellite, brown zircons. The jewels, in fact, resemble large eyes, but also primitive masks. Prices: from 5,000 to 40,000 pounds for bespoke ones. Giulia Netrese



Anello Mask, in oro e granati orange
Anello Mask, in oro e granati orange
Orecchini Butterfly, con tormalina e granati
Orecchini Butterfly, con tormalina e granati
Anello in oro e tormalina
Anello in oro e tormalina
Cora Sheibani, collezione Eyes
Cora Sheibani, collezione Eyes
Orecchini della collezione Eyes, indossati
Orecchini della collezione Eyes, indossati
Orecchini Mask
Orecchini Mask
Orecchini oro bianco e tormalina
Orecchini oro bianco e tormalina

small eye ring green