- Joined
- Apr 26, 2007
- Messages
- 8,087
Without going into too much background, my life''s been pretty much tip-turned upside down (bonus points if you recognize the source on that) and I can''t continue with my current career. I''m very good at what I do, but before I chose to do it, my #1 alternative was going into the jewelry industry, in one way, shape or form. My dad talked my out of it (he was a colored stone dealer before he retired), because he thought it was unreliable and no place for a woman. Well, my current, incredibly white-collar career has turned out to be less reliable than I thought, and ... well, the first thing that pops into my head is still jewelry.
The thing is, my dad and his connections aren''t helpful: in his time, you just showed up and made yourself useful and proved you knew where the good stuff was and how much it was worth, and then, as he often likes to say: first you made your reputation, and then your reputation makes you. Most I''ve got in the way of rep. now, is, "Hey! Joe''s kid! She id''d stuff well back in the day, and then she got some kind of a fancy degree!" Which is all well and good, but which won''t get me a job.
Ideally, I would have liked to have gotten an AA from FIT in jewelry design this year, or jumped into a Jewelry Manufacturing Arts course in NY this fall, and then gotten a GGG as time passed, once I was also making some money, but ... FIT is DONE for the year, and the Jewelry Manufacturing Arts program at GIA NY is also full up (though I can put myself on a waitlist). Both of those would have been $5000 a semester, give or take. So, this year, I can get a Graduate Diamonds Course, and then do Jewelry Manufacturing Arts in Spring, or go straight for Graduate Gemologist (a combo of diamonds and colored stones, for about $18,000 - apparently Colored Stones are $13000 in comparison to the $5000 of Jewelry Arts or Diamonds - makes sense, as they''re everything else).
So ... what is the most practical/lucrative? At the end of the day, I''m interested in making jewelry for fun and profit, with appraising jewelry as a close second. What path would you recommend for these? I would need to be in NY. Thanks in advance for your time and attention!
The thing is, my dad and his connections aren''t helpful: in his time, you just showed up and made yourself useful and proved you knew where the good stuff was and how much it was worth, and then, as he often likes to say: first you made your reputation, and then your reputation makes you. Most I''ve got in the way of rep. now, is, "Hey! Joe''s kid! She id''d stuff well back in the day, and then she got some kind of a fancy degree!" Which is all well and good, but which won''t get me a job.
Ideally, I would have liked to have gotten an AA from FIT in jewelry design this year, or jumped into a Jewelry Manufacturing Arts course in NY this fall, and then gotten a GGG as time passed, once I was also making some money, but ... FIT is DONE for the year, and the Jewelry Manufacturing Arts program at GIA NY is also full up (though I can put myself on a waitlist). Both of those would have been $5000 a semester, give or take. So, this year, I can get a Graduate Diamonds Course, and then do Jewelry Manufacturing Arts in Spring, or go straight for Graduate Gemologist (a combo of diamonds and colored stones, for about $18,000 - apparently Colored Stones are $13000 in comparison to the $5000 of Jewelry Arts or Diamonds - makes sense, as they''re everything else).
So ... what is the most practical/lucrative? At the end of the day, I''m interested in making jewelry for fun and profit, with appraising jewelry as a close second. What path would you recommend for these? I would need to be in NY. Thanks in advance for your time and attention!