Charlotte Magazine February 2021

Page 24

THE GOOD LIFE

ST YL E

Sarah Kaplan designs sustainable jewelry inspired by her love of art BY TAYLOR BOWLER

IN AN INDUSTRY where fast fashion and mass-produced accessories reign, Sarah Kaplan is one of a growing number of jewelry designers concerned with artistry and sustainability. VUE by SEK, her collection of handcrafted jewelry, has one-of-a-kind pieces made with natural gold and rhodium-plated metals. Every necklace and earring is nickel- and lead-free, and each gemstone varies slightly in shape, size, and color. Kaplan calls her designs “wearable art.” Just as clothing brands are using more organic cotton and ecofriendly dyes, jewelers are starting to use recycled metals and commit to minimal waste. “I utilize every single piece,” Kaplan says. “Everything from our packaging to our materials is ecofriendly, and every stone is sourced in an ethical way.” Before she launched VUE by SEK in 2018, the 31-year-old Winston-Salem native worked at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. “I loved being surrounded by so many creative people,” she says. “I couldn’t help but want to start creating again, and jewelry has always been my art.” Though she’d designed and beaded necklaces since childhood, Kaplan studied under a goldsmith to learn the

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CHARLOTTEMAGAZINE.COM // FEBRUARY 2021

Winston-Salem native Sarah Kaplan worked at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., before she launched VUE by SEK in 2018.

craft. She continued her fundraising and development work in Washington until 2018, when she and her boyfriend moved to Charlotte, where he opened a private investment firm. “I took on another development role at a nonprofit, but when COVID came along, everything came to a halt,” she says. “It was the perfect opportunity to make this a full-time thing.” The self-described art history lover finds inspiration for her jewelry from public art around the city, contemporary sculptures, large modern paintings, and her collection of exhibition catalogs from her time at the museum. S-E-K are Kaplan’s initials, while VUE comes from the French word for “view,” because “my jewelry expresses your unique view in life,” she explains. “It’s the in-between piece you can wear every day, all day, or dress it up.” Kaplan works with a Rhode Island-based foundry that does the metalwork and plating; when the pieces come back to her, she applies the gemstones, pearls, clasps, and chains. Pieces range from $45 to $90, and Kaplan wants to fix her prices there. “I work with tight margins to make sure that happens. And I have a very lean team right now,” she says with a laugh. She’d

CHRIS EDWARDS

A View with a Sparkle


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