One night in Lewiston we went to the restaurant Fish Bones. It was October, it was cool, there was a slight breeze. We parked, got out of the car and noticed a line of tall slender ginkgo trees. I’m part kid. The streetlights lit up the line of bright yellow trees, they glowed in the dark like a noon day sun. I took my IPhone out and took pictures. I studied the bright yellow triangular leaves and thought about my 6th grade teacher who said there was an ancient tree from southeast Asia that had been around since the age of the dinosaurs.
Nancy finally said she was cold, and we went inside. Keith, our Clipper Ship Trade Wind guy, spends 2 months every year in southeast Asia hunting for gems. When he gets back to New England the first thing he does is to go through his acquisitions and match gems to be able to create pairs for earrings. We know of no one in America who could create an earring as beautiful as this pair. The blue gems singing color and brilliance, the 5 diamonds across the bottom define the lower leaf. The earring dangles from an Apollo’s bayonet lyre-loop the ginkgo drop swings freely.
Here is Our Guarantee
Buy these, wear these. Go out with a group of 6 best friends and see if these earrings don’t generate a focus of conversation. We will double your exchange return privilege from 30 to 60 days so that you can test them well. Every time you move, speak, gesture – they are sending multiple messages to your group. They will look awesome.
The Gems
Blue sapphire – Blue sapphire usually comes from southeast Asia. Blue is a color nature feels generous with in this part of the world. We love blue, particularly blue that shows well after the sun goes down. We tend toward a lighter brighter true blue color in all of our sapphire pieces. Hardness is 9, which means it’s super durable and secondary only to diamond.
Diamonds – world sourced, cut in Belgium. Well-cut with a full complement of 58 facets, rating a 3 on our quality cut scale. Nice white color, beautifully matched. Hardness 10, which means this is the hardest, most durable gem in the universe…and because of its high white color, high clarity, and superlative cutting – it’s super brilliant.
About the Trade Wind Collection:
Where does inspiration come from? Where do the creative sparks for design begin? For Cross’ new Trade Wind Jewelry Collection, we find ourselves drawn into the story of Captain John Henry Drew, from Gardiner, Maine. Born in 1834, he grew up the son of a Ship’s Carver, and went to sea at the age of 15, eventually becoming Captain of a series of clipper ships, and traveling from New York to China and back home, when that voyage took more than seventeen months.
Instead of carving or knotting or other hobbies that were characteristic of sailors, this mostly self-educated man read books, memorized details from newspapers, and wrote about his journey—his literal and his inner journey. His hand-written and personally illustrated journals tell us of his longing for Maine, for his family, and for “making something of himself”. He is very much like you and me, and it makes his story that much more compelling. He savors apples from home, as tasting better than apples from anywhere else. He imagines the scene he might see looking in the window at home, where his family sits, and he chastises himself for not getting more done at home when he was there.
The jewelry in our Trade Wind Collection is made by his great-great-great grandson, Keith. This young man went to sea as well, at age 18. As part of his service to the US Navy, his travels took him to many of the same places his great-great-great grandfather’s clipper ships visited. Keith also had a hobby unconventional for sailors— he had a fascination for gems and he studied gemology. He studied so that when his service was completed, he could become a jeweler. As Keith traveled the world, he collected exquisite gems, and after leaving the service and returning home, he mastered the art of fine jewelry making.
It is now decades later. We met Keith for the first time in March, 2014. We were impressed with his jewelry, and as we talked further, discovered he had a clipper ship sea captain ancestor and became intrigued with the parallels of his journey in life with that of his sea captain forebear.
The parallels in the two stories are expressed in the jewelry itself—the exotic colors, the flow of the designs, the attention to detail which is something passed down in this family—whether it is to protect the ship, its cargo and its crew, or to create a design that will last and protect its valuable gems, giving the wearer the same pleasure we experience when a ship at full sail goes by. You can’t help but stop and exclaim, “Isn’t that beautiful?”
We were hooked by this story, and by the jewelry. We think you will be too. In fact, we’re posting pages from Captain Drew’s journals from the Voyage of the Franklin in 1868. Take a few minutes to join in the journey, and think of those you love most, and rejoice if they are right there with you.
Read the Captain’s
Clipper Ship Journal Entries
Read Keith’s Gem Expedition Dispatches