Silver among the rice fields
Hermes show a galloping success |
Chinese designer teams with Swarovski |
The first piece of John Hardy jewelry ever sold was at New York's Neiman Marcus department store. Even so, the chief buyer had told Hardy he was to turn his original key ring into a pair of earrings before he would commission a consignment of 500 pieces.
It was the 1970s. John Hardy, a jewelry designer from Canada, was enjoying a laid-back existence on the island of Bali in Indonesia basking in the sun, sea and sand.
He was a reluctant but talented craftsman who only made pieces when he needed the money, and he had found good company and inspiration among the descendants of goldsmiths to the royal courts of Bali, his first partners back in 1975.
John Hardy, the jewelry brand, is still based in Bali, in the hilly suburbs of Ubud among the rice fields and bamboo forests. An all-organic showroom on stilts hovers over padi patches, built so the whole structure leaves the irrigation network of the rice fields undisturbed.
Elsewhere in the compound, low impact buildings blend into the surroundings and an almost all local work force live, work and eat together, catered to by a kitchen that still uses wood stoves. Vegetables and rice are planted, harvested and eaten all within the compound boundaries.
A bevy of white ducks swim in the nearby creek and a cocky red rooster herds his harem about the backyard. There are also rabbits and goats penned up nearby.