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Friday 17 June 2016

Your Accessory must be Uniquely You

Do you love jewelry?
If, by the slimmest chance,your answer is “no”, we’d say, you haven’t discovered yourself and its time you did.
You perhaps fall in that minority bandwidth of women, who doesn’t realize what a well-crafted jewelry piece can do for her looks and outfits. 
On the contrary, if your answer to our question is a resounding “yes” – we are happy that you already are in the league of women who make an intelligent use of jewelry in accentuating the most attractive features of their personality.
Jewelry is a necessary evil. It’s the perfect accessory to complete any outfit. Jeans and a T-shirt may look so casual, but not if you pair it with a chunky bracelet, or a fun pair of earrings. It will transform your look, completely! 

We bet that chosen carefully dangles can make even the drabbest outfit look chic!
Don’t believe us? Try us and we bet you’d be a convert, soon. 
Jeweler need not always have a deep commemorative meaning
Sometime, you don’t have to please anyone but yourself with a piece of costume jewelry that may have any resale value.
If you happen to be an impulse buyer who buys simply to please herself, come step into our parlor (www.chickraft.com) – we’d have just the right stuffy for you and we guarantee it won’t cost you the moon!
For some women jewelry is not just an accessory – it’s the leitmotif that completes a carefully-designed ensemble and we agree with their reasoning. Stone-washed jeans may not look extremely stunning with ChickKraft’s signature silk scarf in silver accents and turquoise, or your short cocktail dress may get a different lift with a dash of diamonds and pearls – but do you have the courage to try? 
Accessories are great for any outfit; you only need to chose the right style expression and we have plenty of resource on http://www.chickkraft.com to help you make the right selection. 
Accessories can make or break your outfits
Be it a tacky bracelet, a frumpy handbag or your mother-of-pearl studs, if it's carelessly paired with a stylish outfit, it can ruin your moment. On the other extreme, if you are a little careful, the same accessories can turn you into a show-stealer!  
Different accessories can look different on different women and it’s not difficult to guess why. Jewelry pieces can represent a woman in many ways. It can make her appear beautiful, charming, classical – whatever impression she wants to convey, provided how she wears it, pairs it and on what occasion!
You can make so many different and interesting style statements with ChickKraft’s bracelets, brooches, rings, neck pieces, earrings and wristwatches that each time you buy a product with us, you can add a new zing to an old outfit that was earlier gathering dust in the wardrobe. 
An important part of a woman’s success in picking the right jewelry is teaming up with a savvy retailer like www.chickkraft.com that deals in multiple styles, follows different fashion trends, has a keen sense of the topical and can offer you terrific discounts and deals on the piece that finally matches your style. 
Have you browsed the various sections of our website?
If you haven’t, its time you did so now. 
It’s time you stepped out of your comfort zone to try something radically different and naughty. Find a piece with lots of flair and flamboyance and before you know it, you would be turning more heads than the woman you envy as you walk into a gathering tonight.
www.chickraft.com has what it takes. 

Thursday 16 June 2016

Designs inspired by Heritage

Sometime ago, a clutch of designers from Japanese fashion house Kenzo did the round of ancient Hindu temples and were so taken in by the intricate design work, the crafted their next collection on it. Two in the group Humberto Leon and Carol Lim had their stunning ensembles (long jackets and pants and wrap-arounds; not saris and lehengas) infused with temple brick work and serpent prints. The collection met with rave reviews – that’s how contemporary and internationally appealing Indian motifs can be!   

The reason for this is not difficult to guess. A culture; a heritage that is as old as India’s has a strong history; a huge body of styles, memories and traditions seeping through every fabric of its being. Traditional Indian jewellery design is no exception to these influences that mainly emerge from two R factors - religion and royalty. Over the years, both these influences have left a deep impression on the exotic, oriental designs, giving it a timeless, almost surreal appeal. 
To a trained eye, there is a clear connection between our jewellery designs and the wall paintings of Ajanta Ellora caves, Pallava sculptures, Chola bronzes, Mughal miniatures and modern Indian jewellery sold by the established design houses today. While the basic elements and combination of their designs, imprints, metal and stones may vary, the leitmotif remains the same – and timeless. This is the enduring quality of Indian jewellery that makes it stand apart from the clutter. Exquisitely and intelligently hand crafted, these pieces appear to transcend history and seamlessly connect the past with the present and even the future! 
Indeed, it’s essential for a society like ours, with a 5,000-year-old deep-rooted culture of jewellery making to hark back to the time of the Indus Valley Civilisation, protect and preserve those old techniques and our authenticity, to keep our identity intact in a world that has shrunk to the size of a global village.
Hailed as a land of the Maharajas and Maharanis of yore, we are indebted and wedded to the legacy they have left behind; the clothes they wore and the jewels they adorned themselves with. If you’ve been to the Golconda fort in Hyderabad and attended the ‘Sound and Light’ show there, would have heard in the story in the clink of a maid’s gold amulet; felt a sliver of romance in the story of the eye-popping Golconda diamond as light as a paperweight; the Mysore silk sarees made of material so fine, all six yards could pass through a ring; or of pendants studded with colored rhinestones, encased in gold that revealed themselves only when the pendant was shattered.  
Indian jewellery, like Indian wedding is all about opulence. As a melting pot of various cultures and subcultures, we are lucky we get to witness all this cultural mélange in our lives. Over the years, we may have started taking it for granted, but it’s an integral part of our lives – and the image that we present to the world.  
Today, it makes us happy to see that Indian jewellery designers are once again making a concerted attempted at re-seeking that connection with their past. Body jewellery is emerging as a new trend in their portfolio, especially in flea markets of Rajasthan and Goa, where you will find the loudest, the chunkiest jhoomars, maang tikas, haathphools and hair accessories sold as part of the Indian bridal wear. It’s been there since ages; only it’s now being accessorized and contemporized. 
And with good effect. 

Creating Lasting Memories

Who are the jewelry buyers of today? Is it women of all ages? Husbands looking for the perfect anniversary gift? A trend-setter? A go-getter? Or someone looking to hoard it for her ever-expanding personal collection? 
Women want jewelry to reflect their station in life. A woman married to a money bag would declare her personality with her heavy-studded jewels, while a working woman may prefer a less-fussy, less-ostentatious piece to declare her modest station.
However, increasingly, women from all strata of our society have begun to demand more from their jewelry – more in terms of design flexibility. Bold and non-traditional, they want to experiment with various looks and ultimately express themselves in more creative, contemporary ways. Their fast-pace living style, along with the cultural fusion in their dress codes has also created a space for jewelry to provide the final accessorizing touch to their look and feel.
Why do women love jewels?
That’s a mystery that no one has been able to crack. Women of all ages and from all periods, from Stone Age to Information Age have felt drawn to gems and jewels. It would be a rare woman who is not passionately and intensely involves with her stones. Perhaps because nature has been kinder to women in bestowing them more beauty and sensuality, they love to make the most of these traits to allure a prospective mate. 
While earlier, women used jewelry crafted from bones, stones, beads and metals, later they started using diamonds, colored gemstones and other metal ware. Vain by nature, women love any object that furthers their beauty and charming jewelry serves this purpose only too well. 
Modern-day women want to move beyond precious jewels
They want every piece of jewelry they buy to be associated with a memory – a Birthday, an anniversary, a promotion at job, a birth in the family. It doesn’t matter if that piece is crafted from precious or semi-precious stones. Once selected it must be a part of their family heirloom. 
They look for ease of purchase, good and efficient service, knowledge of the latest fashion trends and rock-solid business ethics – everything that www.chicKraft.com provides. Our buyers want a long-term relationship with us – much like they had with their traditional jewelers - through personalized products and service.  That’s exactly the kind of attention we guarantee to our women consumers at www.chicKraft.com.  
We understand our consumers better than anyone else and this is reflected in the designs we choose and present to them. We make women feel special and understood. The honesty of our designs attract our female customers like honey bees to a flower. The uniqueness of our work stands out tall amongst the mass-produced products that are being made and sold in the market today by the dozens. 
If you don’t believe us, visit us today at www.chicKraft.com and we promise you an experience you haven’t had till date.

A glimpse into the history

      
 Jewels were always a part of the centuries-old Indian culture. From the earliest known material - stones, animal skins, feathers, plants, bones, shells, wood; we gradually graduated to semi-precious materials such as obsidian. Later, when technology advanced, we started meting these metals in huge cauldrons, mixing and matching them with other metals to introduce more variety into our modern jewelry styles. And today, with the modern science of metallurgy and gem processing by our side, jewelry-making has emerged as a sort of a specialized art, albeit for the same purpose - express the wearer’s wealth, rank, political and religious affiliation or affections for someone – non-verbally.
The earliest known pieces were simple bead necklaces of shells, strung together with a silk twine. They were mainly charms or talismans meant to ward off evil influences. A few (Tulsi mala, white pearls etc.) also had religious or spiritual significance in certain Southern temple traditions, although they were mainly used for decorative purposes. With time however, jewellery craftsman began creating more complex pieces, meant to adorn specific parts of a woman or a deity’s body.
History has it that in the year 2500 BC, Queen PuAbi was buried in Samaria (Now Iran) with stunning pieces of gold and silver jewelry. To date, this remains among the richest archeological find of its kind that is sometimes used to benchmark the date for the existence of modern-day jewelry. 
Experts contend that the Egyptian were perhaps the oldest practitioners of this art form. It was during their time that this enterprise got elevated to a specialized professional schools, and Egyptian craftsmen became widely known for their skill, precision and intricate craftsmanship. 
Early Greek and Roman jewelry was also traded heavily with neighboring countries and became a means of sustenance and barter for those societies. Intricate Greek earrings that evolved out of their metal working techniques were highly in demand during this period. 
Next, during the Victorian era, jewelry came to be inspired by Christianity and in the middle ages monasteries produced a bulk of these body embellishments used by popes and archbishops. The renaissance period, or what is referred to as the “Jewel Age” was jewelry began to be used by the common man, mainly for the purpose of body adornment and as a means of personal gratification.
The impressionist era or 17th century jewelry was inspired by floral patterns and animals motifs studded with a variety of gemstones and metals. The trend continued until the early part of the 20th Century, when glass beads came into vogue. The industrial revolution introduced newer metal working and bead making techniques and fashion jewelry changed faster than ever. Jewelry crafted during the Art Nouveau, Edwardian, Art Deco and Retro periods spelled huge changes in design trends that remain popular to this day. 
Today affordability and availability are the hallmarks of jewelry worn by working women. Although India continues to buck this trend and is still the biggest consumer of the yellow metal in the world, with the variety of investment options now available, precious metals and gemstones are no longer the primary means of wealth accumulation, although in certain power circles, women still patronize traditional pieces as a means to convey their social status. Nonetheless, jewelry today is more a matter of convenience and aesthetics. A confident working woman knows her mind, and doesn’t get swayed by any particular school.  
The Indian stamp 
The history of Indian jewellery may be as old as the history of the country itself – about 5000 years old. Indian goldsmiths were usually men identified in different parts of the country as - sonar, swarnakara, panchallar or thattan. In the Vedic period, goldsmiths enjoyed a higher social standing than other artisans, and enjoyed royal patronage. They were all deft at mixing alloys, molding, drawing fine wires, setting stones, inlay work, relief, drawing gold and silver into thin wires, plating and gilding.
Later, different, regional styles emerged. Orissa and Andhra Pradesh came to be known for their fine filigree work in silver; Jaipur for its enameling or meenakari; Tamil Nadu for its temple jewellery; and Delhi for setting semi-precious and precious stones in gold, a tradition known as kundanwork. Silver beads can also be told apart from their region of origin - Rajasthan, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh and Himachal Pradesh, all follow different lace work and patterns in filigree work, leaves, flowers, butterflies, birds and geometrical shapes of varying size and thickness. A skilled jewellers would draw out fine wires of silver mixed with lead and make an outline of the pattern in thick wire that are then collected in this framework to create a jail (lace work). 
Indeed the story of handcrafted Indian jewellery is long, absorbing and awe-inspiring. And it’s still evolving.