RUBIES AND EMERALDS are nice, but they could certainly stand to loosen up. That’s the idea behind British designer Solange Azagury-Partridge’s new Scribbles collection ($1,500–$80,000; solange.co.uk), which looks exactly how it sounds: like haphazard scrawls stretched across wrists, necks, and fingers. The ceramic-and-lacquer pieces, which pop like Warhol paintings, pair three-dimensional zig-zagging forms with the kind of gems that usually find themselves stuck in traditional gold and silver settings.
“I’m diffusing the preciousness of jewels. If I can’t add something different to jewelry, why bother at all?”—Solange Azagury-Partridge, jewelry designer Purple rubellites and forest-green emeralds are the bases for Scribbles’ freeform designs, which Azagury-Partridge calls “mini sculptures for the hand.” But those doodles aren’t as random as they appear. The designer cherry-picks each stone for its color, shape, and vibrancy,…
