Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Move over, diamonds; these bracelets are forever, too

- By Hilary Sheinbaum

Sophia Wu and Rachel Fulton, who are best friends, met in 2013, on their first day of freshman year at New York University. A little over eight years later, on Nov. 5, they selected matching Forever Sweet Nothing Bracelets to be welded around their respective wrists — a literal bond to celebrate their emotional one.

“It’s very simple and dainty,” Fulton, 26, said of her wrist piece. “We’ll want it forever, and it matches with anything.”

Wu, a student at the George Washington University School of Medicine in Washington, D.C., had made a weekend trip to cheer on Fulton during the New York City Marathon and exchange holiday gifts.

“I thought we would do an early Christmas present, and it’s also something to keep reminding her that I’m thinking about her during her 26.2 miles,” Wu, 26, said before the race.

Fulton, who works in fashion sales and lives in the East Village, and Wu got their welded bracelets at the SoHo location of Catbird, a jewelry brand establishe­d in Brooklyn in 2004. The company said it does 70 welding sessions each day.

Customers choose from five gold, clasp-free chains that cost $98 to $334, before a custom fitting and getting “zapped” (a one-minute welding, without skin contact).

“What we see a lot is people coming in to mark an occasion or to have it be a reminder of a triumph or tribulatio­n, or as a friendship bracelet,” said Leigh Plessner, the chief creative officer at Catbird.

Rony Vardi, the founder and CEO of Catbird, said she and Catbird studio

jewelers started experiment­ing with the idea of welding jewelry around their bodies in 2016. “It seemed like an evolution of the style of jewelry that we have always trafficked in. It’s always about effortless jewelry,” Vardi said. “I never take off any of my jewelry.”

The brand’s first pop-up welding event was in the Williamsbu­rg neighborho­od of Brooklyn in spring 2017. To date, Catbird says it has zapped 26,000 bracelets.

There are pragmatic motives, too. “Whatever mechanism is being used to fasten an item like a necklace or bracelet is often going to be the weak link in a piece of jewelry,” said Jeffrey Cohen, the president of Craft Lab Grown Diamonds in New York. “By eliminatin­g the clasp and creating the seamless effect, you are likely making the item more secure.”

Many permanent bracelet videos can rake in

hundreds of thousands of likes on social media. “It has become so popular because of TikTok videos,” said Lindsey Bishop, the owner and head metalsmith at Lackadazee, a handcrafte­d jewelry company in Louisville, Kentucky. Her store offers silver and gold permanent bracelets with and without charms. “We saw a huge influx of people,” she said.

Leah Belford, the owner of Leah Alexandra, a jewelry brand in Vancouver, British Columbia, began offering permanent bracelets after seeing welding equipment at a trade show. Two and a half years later, her business Spark Studio bonds about 800 bracelets each month.

The life span of a welded chain depends on an individual’s lifestyle and activity. If people change their minds about permanence (or require an MRI, for example), the claspless bands can be easily snipped off using a pair of household scissors.

 ?? SPARK STUDIO ?? A pair of welded bracelets from Leah Alexandra. Customers turn to welding machines to mark emotional bonds with physical ones.
SPARK STUDIO A pair of welded bracelets from Leah Alexandra. Customers turn to welding machines to mark emotional bonds with physical ones.

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