Jewelery Shop Display Stand

Jewelery Shop Display Stand

A nicely balanced,  elegan and creative jewellery shop display design by Warnerusa.com.

I wish there more jewellery shop displays like this one, where the enphasis is fully on the aesthetics value of the display and it’s ability to enhance the exposure of the product.

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Jewellery Shop Display : clear acrylic

acrylic jewellery shop displays

acrylic jewellery shop displays

Acrylic shop displays are the easiest to get made in low runs.

The making of these shop displays can be easily customized,

the set up expenses very low and same for the required production run

which makes it affordable for the small retail shop or wholesaler.

This jewellery shop display doubles as an earring display on the left hand side

and a  necklace shop display on the right hand side.

The clear through nature of clear acrilyc always makes for a clean and elegant

display as long as you keep clean and without scratches.

Image from Flickr .

In Australia I recomend my favourite supplier, Paul from Ultraform in Noosa.

It’s a family run busines, the quality is excellent and the prices more than affordable.

You can ring him on +61 7 5474 3228 .-

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I love this wonderful jewelry display by M Lavine design workshop !

jewellery 2

jewelry display cabinet : M Lavine design

 

 

jewellery display : M Lavine design

jewellery display : M Lavine design

The level of craftmanship and design it’s inspiring, they go out of their way to make sure the display fits the shops display needs and purposes.

I will be posting a few other images in weeks to come, even though these displays  images are meant as inpiration and guidance only of what’s possible, you can dream up your great shop displays.

You can check their website for other great shop displays and fittings.

Display specs :

Jewelry Case

Product Description: Aluminum framed glass with lights and black laminated legs and pink faux upholstered front drawer

Width: 36″

Depth: 24″

Height: 45″

Product Materials: Aluminum framed glass with lights; black laminate legs.

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from beth miller's site

DIY earring display

 

Are you looking for an inexpensive and elegant way to display you handmade earrings? When doing art shows, I receive many compliments on how my earrings are displayed. I made these displays at the beginning of last summer and found them to be very functional. Minimal wire working skills are needed, and basic pliers. The great part is that each display stacks inside the next, so they become very compact. They also allow for each piece of earrings to have their own display rack, accentuating their uniqueness!
(more…)

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Necklace Display : DIY !

  Jewellery display stand : DIY       When I was developing the layout for my jewelry booth last spring, I decided that I wanted to make my own retail displays. I had been looking around on the internet for shop fittings, retail store displays and had found that everything was either too expensive, or just looked like everyone else’s displays. I was looking for a form that I could display a necklace on, and also something that could stack together and fit nicely in a small space. (The reason I needed everything so compact is because I was traveling in a small saturn that has insufficient trunk space.) Materials: Fun Foam (large sheet) Rubber Cement Scissors Small sheet of posterboard, or an old cereal box Pen Cost: Approximately $.75 per display I came up with a design that was cheap, easy to make and compact. I used this material call Fun Foam that s sold at many large craft store, which runs about $1-$2 per sheet. * First, I measured an oval shape out, I made a template out of a cereal box that I opened up to lay flat. I actually traced a oval shaped ceramic baking dish, but any large oval shape will work. * Then I made a 3″ slit in the cardboard on one of the ends (The slit should be cut from the edge, towards the middle of the oval.) Also make a mark on the edge of the template about 3″ away from the slit. * I traced this shape onto the Fun Foam (two ovals will fit on one large piece of fun foam). Then I put my pen in the 3″ slit and traced that onto the foam. Also I made a pen mark where the second mark was made. * I cut out the oval shapes with my scissors, and then I made a cut where the 3″ line was drawn. Then I drew on the foam a pie slice shape from where the 3″ line was to the second mark on the edge of the piece. * I put rubber cement onto this triangle shape on the foam and then folded over the other side to stick to it. I used paper clips and clothes pins to hold it until the glue was dry. * The Metal Piece is made from 19 inches of 16 ga copper wire. Mark the wire at 3″, 8″, 11″, 16″, 19″ with a sharpie. * Holding the wire vertically, bend a 90 degree angle away at the 8″ mark and the 11″ mark. (This will be the top of the display where the earrings hang.) * Then, holding the wire like a U-shape, bend the left wire back, away from you (a little more than 90 degrees) then the same to the right hand wire. * Poke two holes 3 inches apart in the foam part, and thread the wire piece through, adjust by hand bending until it fits correctly. Pros: durable, lightweight, easy to make, cheap supplies, easy to clean, compact Cons: light weight (can be a problem if jewelry is light weight and it is windy), can show dust, can get crushed if packed carelessly. Can become sort of squished if jewelry is really heavy. Posted by Posted by http://bethmillner.wordpress.com/2008/03/12/how-do-i-make-a-jewelry-display/

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