RAIDING GRANDMA’S JEWELLERY BOX
INSPIRED BY THEIR LATE GRANDMOTHER LILY BLANCHE’S ASSORTMENT OF EXOTIC JEWELS BROUGHT BACK FROM HER DAYS LIVING IN RAJ-ERA INDIA, SCOTTISH SISTERS GILLIAN CRAWFORD AND LYNDSEY BOWDITCH, HAVE LAUNCHED A NEW JEWELLERY COLLECTION NAMED AFTER HER.
For many people, working with a family member would be the making of a nightmare but for Edinburgh-based sisters Gillian Crawford and Lyndsey Bowditch, it is proving a winning partnership.
“We used to fight as kids, but have a very symbiotic relationship now”, explains Gillian. In their relatively short career as jewellery designers — Gillian used to work in media, but launched her first jewellery and gifts collection Tartan Twist with Lyndsey in 2008 — they have already been shortlisted for Jewellery Designer of the Year 2010 at The Scottish Fashion Awards.
The pair are hoping their new range, Lily Blanche Edinburgh, launched at this month’s International Jewellery Show in London, will continue their string of success. Described by Gillian as “glamorous and romantic, with the aesthetic of Audrey Hepburn”, the most distinctive pieces—including the Eternal Pearls — have a strong vintage feel, tieing in to the Hepburn hair seen on girls at Prada’s autumn/winter 2010 show and the nostalgic mood of this season’s make-up.
“The collection is based around our grandmother Lily Blanche, born at the turn of the 20th century,” explains Gillian. “She was a kind of everywoman: she travelled, had children, lived through the war and was bombed out of her house, and could still knock up a wedding dress from bits and pieces and look stunning.”
Gillian says that as children, she and Lyndsey enjoyed visiting Lily, who was tucked away in a croft in the Outer Hebrides, and sifting through all of her treasures. “She lived in India when she was younger and before that her husband was stationed in China so she had a lot of exotic pieces. We’ve taken vintage designs inspired by her jewel box and given them a modern twist. We have tried to bring something light-hearted and fun.” Embodying this playfulness is the Peapod Necklace.

Made with a mix of sterling silver, British-sourced freshwater pearls, and Italian Murano glass, pieces in the collection will retail from £40 to £200 and Gillian hopes they will give the likes of Dower & Hall a run for their money. “What makes this collection stand out is the element of surprise; so many of the things open up, like the Memory Keeper Sphere.”
Words Hannah Davies




