Posts Tagged ‘Add new tag’

DO NOT BE NOISE!

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

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There is blood in the water

Friday, June 5th, 2009

I can’t help but feel this is the perfect analogy for today’s business climate. We the small fish come together and eat the old infrastructure of traditional business practice. Excited to see a true revolution taking place.

Children Playing Tonight! Shangri La in Brooklyn!

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

British Vogue January 2009

Monday, January 5th, 2009

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Blake Lively in Bing Bang Egg Bangles

InStyle Magazine – Jewel Box Profile – June 2008

Friday, June 27th, 2008

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InStyle Magazine, Jewel Box Profile
The Look The imaginative Brooklyn, NY, designer likes to shake up conventional design.  Sheffield inverts semi-precious stones in cocktail rings, lines a tiger’s claw with gleaming diamonds and fashions sterling-silver hoops to look like bets for fairies.  Her moody gems conjure the intoxicating colors of liquor and liqueurs—champagne and cognac diamonds and whiskey quartz.

How to Wear It Like jewelry from a curiosity cabinet, these pieces spark conversation.  Contrast their slightly vintage vibe with a light blazer or a bright floral print summer dress.
Who Wears It Mandy Moore, Chloe Sevigny, Michelle Williams

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Claw Talisman Necklace

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Click here to Purchase

Bing Bang for Lutz & Patmos – FALL 2007, PRE-SPRING 2008 AND SPRING 2008 COLLECTIONS.

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008


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BING BANG / LUTZ & PATMOS COLLABORATES WITH ANNA SHEFFIELD FROM BING BANG ON SWEATER PINS AND BELTS FOR THEIR FALL 2007, PRE-SPRING 2008 AND SPRING 2008 COLLECTIONS.

The New York Times – Sunday Styles – October 2007

Saturday, October 27th, 2007

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“The Jewelry Designer”

When Anna Sheffield seeks inspiration, she searches both high and low.  As the designer of the jewelry ling Bing Bang since 2002, she recently added fine jewelry and handbags to her repertory.  She has also designed pieces in collaboration with Phillip Lim and Marc Jacobs, whom she calls “a grand inspiration.”
Ms. Sheffield, 33 described her own look as “a combination of many things, from Gibson girls to punk rock.
“One of my signature elements is a two-finger ring.  It’s one of the first pieces I ever made.  I had seen them at the Byzantine section at the Met and at the Fulton Street Mall, with words like ‘sweetheart’ on them.”
Ms. Sheffield’s wardrobe is a similar intertwining of fine art and street altitude.  Here, she wears an H&M sweater atop a Miu miu silk taffeta skirt, Chle Mihara shoes (which she chose for their Great Gatsby feel) and two gold necklaces of her own design.  The purse is from her handbag collection.  Of course, she is always accessorizing by her tattoos, which spiral up and down her arms and legs.  They are by Scott Campbell, a Brooklyn artist.
“I’ve been getting them for many, many years,” she said.  “I wanted the flowers to look like tole ware flowers, the kind you see on vintage black enamel trays and tins.  Sometimes I have to consider them when I am picking out my clothes, but they’re so much a part of my personal style, they usually don’t interfere.”

W Magazine – December 2005

Tuesday, December 27th, 2005

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Bing Bang Boom by Jessica Iredale

Karmic boomerang, “That’s how jewelry designer Anna Sheffield describes her experience in New York City.  “Anything you want to do here, you throw it out there and it comes back to you,” she says.  “I’ve never been anywhere that has such a return on things.”
If that’s the case, Sheffield, who grew up in New Mexico, must have some seriously spotless karma.  Her brief but bountiful career designing mixed-metal collection Bing Bang has been marked by several lucky breaks that include, in the past six months alone, collaborations with Marc Jacobs and Douglas Little.  Not bad for someone whose foray into jewelry was “completely accidental.”
The boomerang took off four years ago in San Francisco, Sheffield, who studied sculpture, blacksmithing and

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metal smithing at San Francisco’s Academy of Art, was set on a fine-art path when a visit to a friend’s boutique, Behind the Post Office, turned her limited jewelry making experience (a few college classes) into an unexpected detour.  Sheffield showed up wearing her own handmade ring and was asked to bring in a few samples.  “I was in the process of trying to launch my fine-art career,” she recalls, “and I thought, Well it couldn’t hurt to make a little jewelry and see if people like it.”  Within a week, her hammered bronze, silver and steel pieces had sold out.  Bing Bang was born—but sculpture wasn’t out of the picture.  A year later, Sheffield relocated to Brooklyn “to see which worked better for me, fine art or jewelry,” she says.  Fast-forward three years, and it’s obvious which won out: Sheffield now has two lines, Bing Band and the more upscale 88 collection, both of which have been picked up by Barneys New York, Harvey Nichols and Le Bon Marche.  Bing Bang retails for less than $500, and 88, for less than $2000.
At first sight, Sheffield, 31, seems an unlikely source for sweethearts and keepsakes, the theme of her spring-summer 2006 collections.  With both arms fully sleeved in tattoos and her septum pierced with a gold hoop, she looks more suited to fronting a punk band than designing lockets and heart-shaped charms.  But her body art and jewelry have a common thread: Both are highly personal.  Her tattoos, she explains, were done by close friends and people she cares about, including her boyfriend, Scott Campbell, who runs a tattoo parlor located in Williamsburg’s Saved Gallery of Art and Craft, which also carries her line.
The collections reverberate with beneath-the-surface significance, from their names (Bing Bang for the sound of her hammer and anvil; 88 is a lucky number) to the shapes of individual lockets, reliquaries and charms, such as an owl, a Burmese symbol of luck.  “I love the idea of a keepsake or something talismanic that represents something to you,” she says.  Much of the collection is inspired by the “pared-down, function-over-form simplicity” of the New Mexican desert where she grew up—less for the Native American aesthetic than for its tradition of craftsmanship.  “It’s the idea that somebody’s hand-hammered that circle into that shape,” Sheffield says.  “It didn’t just come out of a machine that way.”
It was the designer’s knack for personalization that piqued Marc Jacob’s interest this past August when he was looking for a jeweler to accessorize his spring 2006 runway show.  Sheffield got the gig based on her talent, but it was her friend and Jacob’s fit model, Shelly Zander, who got her in the door.  “Shelly always wears my jewelry,” Sheffield says.  “I think Marc spent a lot of time looking at it during fittings, and eventually he asked her about it.”  Sheffield had two weeks to put together a collection of roughly 30 pieces in a schoolgirl theme, some of which will be sold under the Bing Bang/Marc Jacobs label in his stores.  “it was the idea of something really sweet and sparkly and sort of heirloom-ish for prom night,” Sheffield says of the jewels, which include everything from diamond hearts and stars to necklaces dangling with diary keys.
For scented-candle-man Douglas Little, whom Sheffield met at New York’s 26th street flea market, she designed a locket he filled with a specially created scent, an item now part of the holiday collection at Barneys New York.
Now Sheffield’s focus is on expanding Bing Bang, possibly to include a gemstone collection.  And although she remains mum on the subject of new offers, future collaborations are definitely of interest.  “Working with someone as amazing and creative and tremendous as Marc Jacobs taught me how fun it can be to design with another person’s aesthetic in mind,” she says.  “He’s so tapped into something—he has this way of coming up with amazing, amazing ideas.  I hope I can be like that.”