Rapaport Magazine
Style & Design

Thai talent


Bangkok’s designers are making a name for themselves internationally.

By Rachael Taylor


Thailand is a globally recognized powerhouse of artisanal-jewelry manufacturing, yet its goldsmiths have traditionally remained behind the scenes. Now, as a wave of young designers emerges from Bangkok, these creative jewelers are launching their own brands.

Showcasing local talent has been a key focus for the Bangkok Gems & Jewelry Fair in recent years. Visitors from across the globe attend the show primarily for its loose gems, unbranded jewels and access to factories ready to produce designs to any spec. Its most recent edition, in February, attracted an audience of 14,000 people from 118 countries. Those visitors witnessed a growing selection of local brands offering beautiful jewels under their own names within curated sections of the exhibition.

The biannual show has focused on empowering not only the jewelry factories for which the region is famous, but local designers who want to create as well as craft.

In addition to established brands, the fair invites local arts schools such as the College of Creative Industry at Srinakharinwirot University; Chiang Mai University; and the Faculty of Gems at Burapha University. At these stands, students display projects and finished works that are of little commercial value, but that grant some insight into the effervescent artistic culture that centers on Bangkok.

And it’s not just local jewelers who are helping create this vibrant scene. International designers such as Canadian-born Kat Florence and Italian designer Alessio Boschi are settling in this city, with its inspiring jewelry heritage, more affordable ways of doing business, and access to some of the world’s best jewelry craftspeople.

Thai design styles vary greatly, and there is no clear, unifying theme. However, many emerging jewelry designers are tapping into their Thai heritage. Kram Collection’s line of miniature blue-and-white cups and saucers dangling from earring posts references Thailand’s ceramics industry, while Porana’s stacking rings use black and white baguette-cut diamonds to simulate the country’s traditional basket-weaving. Patcharavipa, perhaps the most successful of Thailand’s emerging brands, tasks craftspeople with texturing yellow gold to achieve a look known as Siam gold.

There is also a lot of innovation within the new creative set, and a keen focus on sustainability. Hailing from one of the earth’s most beautiful but polluted spots, the next generation, unsurprisingly, wishes to make a statement through art. Piroon Jewellery has created ivory-inspired pieces that are fully recyclable, while Nympheart uses salvaged wood waste corrected with resin into smooth, gem-like shapes.

What is both exciting and frustrating about this new cohort of Thai brands is that you’ll find little about them online. Broken links, a lack of websites, and vanished social-media profiles are commonplace. While they display a high level of innovation and craftsmanship, they lack the slick sophistication of Western marketing. Buyers will most likely have to travel to Bangkok to find them. There, stores looking to build distinctive product offerings can embrace a fresh design perspective from this emerging sector of the country’s jewelry culture.

Here are three talented Thai designers worth watching.

Patcharavipa Bangkok-born Patcharavipa Bodiratnangkura is a prime example of a Thai designer breaking out internationally. The Patcharavipa jewelry brand, which specializes in Siam gold (a style of texturing that requires skilled craftspeople to achieve), is now in stock at stores across the globe, including Dover Street Market in New York, and luxury boutique Jeffrey’s branches in New York, Palo Alto, California, and Atlanta, Georgia. Bodiratnangkura graduated from Central Saint Martins fine-arts university in London in 2014, and she splits her time between London, where she has an office, and Bangkok, where her jewelry is manufactured. Patcharavipa also opened a flagship store in Bangkok’s Ploenchit district last year.

Porana Porana, named after a Thai flower, is an offshoot of family-owned jewelry company Siamwell, which has been in business in Bangkok for 35 years. Created by the daughter of Siamwell’s founder, Porana focuses on modern ring designs that lend themselves well to stacking.

Delicate, diamond-set pieces use round, princess and baguette cuts to create a contemporary aesthetic at attractive price points. A simple 14-karat gold band retails for $130, while an 18-karat white-gold solitaire diamond engagement ring with intricate pavé work sells for $2,250.

A highlight is the Weave collection, which beautifully incorporates Thailand’s basket-weaving history into modular designs that can’t help but win over the West.

Anisa Chen For Anisa Chen, who was born in China but moved with her husband to his native Thailand, the gemstone is king. Her jewels are made by hand in Bangkok, using 9-karat gold and an array of unusual colored stones. These include slices of watermelon tourmaline and glittering druzy — a form of quartz that reveals its crystalline structure — offset with diamond pave. Opals are a particular favorite. Design motifs range from cutesy animal shapes and floral inspirations to edgy spikes and outsized earrings and rings. In addition to solid gold jewels, Chen offers a gold-vermeil collection. Her pieces can take up to a month to complete.

Image: Hexagon hoop earrings and Round ring in Siam yellow gold; patcharavipa.com / Vela earrings with sliced tourmalines; anisachen.com / Black-diamond stacking band ring from the Weave collection 14-karat gold; poranajewelry.com

Article from the Rapaport Magazine - May 2019. To subscribe click here.

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