SilentEcho456 Posted April 28 Report Posted April 28 I inherited a brooch from my grandmother it's a beautiful antique piece with old mine-cut diamonds and a deep red ruby at the center, probably from the early 1900s. The craftsmanship is genuinely incredible, but the style is just not something I'd ever wear. It sits in a box, which feels like such a waste for something with that much sentimental and material value. I've been thinking about having it completely reimagined maybe deconstructed and remade into a pendant or a ring that I'd actually reach for. Has anyone done something like this? Is it even feasible to work with stones from an existing piece, or do jewelers usually push you toward buying new ones? Quote
Mingrates28 Posted April 28 Report Posted April 28 Yes not only is it feasible, it's actually one of the more meaningful things you can do with inherited jewelry. You preserve the stones (which carry all that history) and transform the piece into something that genuinely belongs in your life rather than a drawer. I had a similar situation with my mother's ring and went through exactly this process.The key is finding a jeweler who does proper heirloom redesign not just resizing or minor alterations, but full creative reimagining with your input at every stage. They'll typically assess the stones first, then work with you on a concept, produce sketches, and build a 3D model before touching anything. The studio I worked with was Olertis they handle this kind of work specifically and treat the original stones with a lot of care. The result was something completely new but deeply personal. Worth looking into https://olertis.com/ Old mine-cut diamonds and a vivid ruby are absolutely gorgeous raw materials to work with a pendant design could be stunning. Quote
SilentEcho456 Posted April 30 Author Report Posted April 30 What a relief to hear I've been so hesitant to even bring this up with anyone, and now I feel like there's actually a real path forward. Thank you!What a relief to hear I've been so hesitant to even bring this up with anyone, and now I feel like there's actually a real path forward. Thank you! Quote
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