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Vermont jewelers craft singular pieces of art

By Diane E. Foulds
Globe Correspondent / January 20, 2008

[ EXCERPTED ]

BURLINGTON, Vt. - Of all the arts, jewelry might be the most personal.

Sandra Owens finds inspiration in more mundane objects. A friend brought her a pile of antique watch parts - gears, faces, and hands - that she converted to earrings and pins. She found spent bullet casings and turned them into Soldiers' Prayer Rings. With her husband, Bill, she operates Silverwear, a small gallery in tiny Benson. Over the years she has noticed that customers are growing more discriminating. "They're getting tired of just owning 'stuff,' " she says. "I'm hearing more and more, 'I want something special, something that is me.' "

That something often amounts to marrying jewelry with personal mementos such as a trinket bought long ago in a dime store. Owens embeds the object in gold or silver, changing it into a precious keepsake that can be worn every day, not just a personal relic "to put in a box and take out on special occasions."

Vermont jeweler Sandra Owens works primarily in silver but also uses gemstones and gold, such as these 14-karat golden orbs measuring. They are cut from long gold wires, then sculpted, filed, and polished.

Vermont jeweler Sandra Owens works primarily in silver but also uses gemstones and gold, such as these 14-karat golden orbs measuring. They are cut from long gold wires, then sculpted, filed, and polished. They retail at $685 a pair.

(Photo courtesy of Sandra Owens)

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Vermont jeweler Sandra Owens creates handmade pieces like these earrings, which are crafted from sterling silver, antique watch faces and gears, a 14-karat gold nail, and fossilized mastodon ivory from the Aleutian Islands. A phrase from an Emily Dickinson poem is inscribed on the ivory in Japanese ink: "...this is the land the sunset washes". The post-backed earrings retail for $325.

(Photo courtesy of Sandra Owens)

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