Toronto Star

Mixing rustic with high-end inventory

- RITA ZEKAS

Gilding the Lily looks like Georgia O’Keeffe’s salon if she’d taken up jewelry making.

There is a cow skull hanging on one of the reclaimed wood walls, a steamer-trunk coffee table, faux fur pillows on a distressed leather couch and a wickedly crude wooden chair at the entrance, from Zenporium in Leslievill­e and available for sale at $2,500. Call it sophistica­ted rustic.

The shop has been open since June, brainchild of Los Angeles stylist Annie Jagger and named after her daughter, Lily. There is definitely an L.A. vibe; the bijoux range from delicate to funky and can go from jeans and white tee to LBD.

Jagger says she was going for “eclectic, classic, rock star and European.” She nailed it.

At the front, a display of the hippy-dippy fringe and Moroccan-feel bags still on everyone’s hit list.

They are handcrafte­d in California by former stylist Camille Simone but have a meet-me-at-the-oasis vibe, ostensibly because they are crafted from wedding sashes, wall hangings and tribal costumes sourced from Nepal to India and embroidere­d with coins, tassels and beading. Prices range from $882 to $1,000.

Your credit card will take a hit here, but there are entry-level items such as $50 “staple” earrings that look like staples if they’d been made of gold.

Gilding comes across as more art gallery than boutique, and curator Jagger has amassed a rock-star list of designers.

There is a definite emphasis on layering pieces, such as sweet gold rings that fit above the knuckle by Toronto designer Alessia Magnotta and Vancouver jeweller Leah Alexandra, as well as bolder pieces such as a gold body chain ($795) from the Toronto label Beaufille (formerly Chloé Comme Parris), helmed by sister duo Chloé and Parris Gordon, nominees for Canadian Arts & Fashion Awards in two categories: fashion and design accessorie­s.

Though most of the rings are stackable and play well with other designers, I covet Rona Pfeiffer’s loner cigar-band ring made of oxidized sterling silver and pavé diamonds for (gulp!) $4,200.

Major trends are covered, including the ear skimmer, which fits in the ear like a regular earring but sits on the lobe and looks like multiple piercings, without the agony.

Lest we forget, the sunglasses, more like fun glasses, by Anna-Karin Karlsson. My personal favourites are the cat’s-eye sun- nies with pale-blue lower rims and blackand-silver zebra-striped on top, which sound like they are so Dame Edna but are so not.

There are home accessorie­s such as chunks of pyrite stone and crystals made into skulls for $350 to $925.

And really, how can you beat a heartshape­d crystal of clear quartz for Valentine’s Day?

They carry coffee-table books including The Rolling Stones by Taschen; the Vitruvi line of aromathera­py oils and tonics from Vancouver; crunchy-granola scent pillows made from dried-balsam needles embroidere­d with “Be Brave And True” and cow skulls, which are actually handcrafte­d and filigreed and are for sale for only $350, which is way less than a trip to Santa Fe, N.M. ritazekas@rogers.com

 ??  ?? Santa Fe-style cow skulls and reclaimed wood set a homey backdrop for Gilding the Lily. The cow skulls, actually handcrafte­d and filigreed, sell for only $350.
Santa Fe-style cow skulls and reclaimed wood set a homey backdrop for Gilding the Lily. The cow skulls, actually handcrafte­d and filigreed, sell for only $350.

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