Policies & Issues

From Mine to Met: Event Co-Chair Gives Platform to Responsibly Sourced Gold

Policies & IssuesMay 03, 2023

From Mine to Met: Event Co-Chair Gives Platform to Responsibly Sourced Gold

Actress Michaela Coel was “dripping in gold” at the Met Gala, wearing jewelry handmade by fellow British-Ghanian artist Emefa Cole.

20230503_EmefaCole-Header.jpg
Michaela Coel approached jewelry designer Emefa Cole ahead of the Met Gala to inquire about Single Mine Origin gold jewelry to represent their shared Ghanaian heritage at the event. Cole styled her with a gold headpiece, a pair of earrings and two cocktail rings from her new “Worth Their Weight” collection. (Photo credit/courtesy of Emefa Cole and Getty Images)
New York—London-based jewelry artist Emefa Cole, together with Single Mine Origin (SMO), created gold jewelry for award-winning actress Michaela Coel to wear as co-chair of the Met Gala. 

Coel was the star, writer and co-director of the 2020 BBC One and HBO limited series “I May Destroy You.” In 2021, she won the Emmy for Outstanding Writing for a Limited Anthology Series or Movie, the first Black woman to do so.

Arriving at the Met on Monday night, Coel wore a handmade coral-esque headpiece clipped into her hair near the nape of her neck, a pair of bold gold statement earrings and two cocktail rings, hand textured to look like silky liquid gold.


When the actress approached Cole to inquire about styling her for the event, her wish was to be “dripping in gold.”

The pieces couldn’t be just any gold, though; it had to be SMO gold responsibly sourced from West Africa, the land of both their parents’ birth.

Because the two share a British-Ghanaian heritage, Cole said sourcing the gold from Endeavor Mining’s Ity mine on the Ivory Coast in West Africa, “really ties [Coel and I] together completely.”

As a designer, Cole’s process always has included recycled metals and stones sourced from Africa, inspired by her homeland.

After being connected with SMO in 2020, she said she made the decision to pivot from using recycled gold to using only SMO gold from West Africa.

According to Single Mine Origin, their gold is the first transparent and traceable gold that has full chain of custody and is fully audited.  All jewelry made with SMO gold comes with a QR code that shows its journey from mine to market.

The company wants to assure consumers their gold was mined responsibly and is free of mercury, which is harmful to miners and the environment, as well as confirming that miners are paid fairly.

“I switched to SMO gold because of 100 percent traceability,” Cole said. “Also, the fact that it’s from a region I come from, and the benefits for the people within that region, the miners. The ethics of the company I found in line with my own values and that’s, for me, quite important.”

The pieces Coel wore at the gala contain a unique QR code that allows viewers to follow the gold from Mine to Met by witnessing the journey of the gold, from the mine, the miners, and the community and environmental projects they support, to meeting Emefa Cole in her studio and, finally, seeing Michaela Coel on the red carpet at the Met Gala.

“It was so beautiful for [Coel] to make that connection and to have such a conscious mind about where the jewelry comes from, the entire chain from mine to maker to wearer,” Cole said.

Following the Met, the pieces will become part of “Worth Their Weight,” a collection by the designer inspired by her partnership with Coel and released the day after the Met Gala.

Cole designed and made every piece in Worth Their Weight, except for Coel’s hairpiece. For that, she collaborated with 28-year-old jeweler Benjamin Hawkins, with whom she shares a space at The Goldsmiths’ Centre, a creative community founded by The Goldsmiths’ Company. The piece has both their hallmarks on it.

20230503_EmefaCole-Headpiece.jpg
The front and back view of the gold hairpiece Michaela Coel wore at the Met Gala on Monday. It boasts three hallmarks: Single Mine Origin, jewelry designer Emefa Cole, and Benjamin Hawkins, a jeweler who collaborated with the designer to make the piece. (Photo courtesy of Emefa Cole.)


“He’s already a master with his own apprentice, and that in itself is rare,” Cole said of Hawkins. “When I met Michaela, Ben was there with me, so she got a sense of the both of us because we were working together. He was incredibly supportive and sort of had the confidence to say, ‘We can do this.’”

The Worth Their Weight collection also includes two large cuffs, a bangle and a brooch. The collection’s name is a play on the sheer weight of traceable gold and the traditional Akan brass weights used by West African people as measuring tools, according to SMO’s website.

“I don’t just make a whole collection and push it all out there at once. It develops as time goes on,” Cole said. “I like to work in a very methodical and patient matter. I add to the pieces as time goes on, which why my ‘Erosion’ series and my ‘Vulcan’ series are continuing, because I have too much inspiration for these pieces. I can’t just do it and then just let it go.”

Coel was familiar with the designer’s Vulcan series when she reached out about the Met Gala. 

“She recently wore my jewelry for a shoot, which was a collaboration between her, the British Film Institute, and BMW, and the pictures were so powerful,” Cole said. “She looked absolutely amazing. She was wearing the ‘Caldera’ rings. That’s how she became aware of my pieces.”

The Vulcan series rings have opened other doors for Cole in her career, as they were acquired by both the The Goldsmiths’ Company’s collection, and the Victoria & Albert Museum (V&A) in London.

Cole first moved to London when she was 12 with a fascination for jewelry, precious metals, stones and the geological process of the Earth, such as volcanoes, already instilled in her. 

She graduated from London Metropolitan University’s Cass School of Art, Media and Design with a bachelor’s degree in Silversmithing and Jewelry in 2011.
 
She also has completed an apprenticeship with the personal Goldsmiths of the Asantehene (The King of the Ashanti) in Ghana, “facilitating a thorough exploration of the ancient lost-wax casting method, which the Ashanti have perfected,” according to her website.

In November 2019, Cole was exhibiting her jewelry at a contemporary craft fair when V&A curator of jewelry Clare Phillips approached her and bought a custom oxidized silver ring with pyrite and gold leaf for her personal collection. 

Phillips later emailed Cole saying the V&A wanted to acquire one of the rings for their permanent collection. In January 2020, the museum chose an “Untitled” ring, which resembles a Caldera ring but, Cole’s website confirms, is not officially named.

 Related stories will be right here … 

In August of last year, Cole was appointed inaugural curator for diaspora jewelry at V&A, having responded to a call for applications by the museum, which had created four new curatorial positions to grow its African and African diaspora collections.

Director of the V&A Tristram Hunt also attended the Met Gala wearing Emefa Cole jewelry, she said. He donned a handmade brooch created from the same batch of gold used to make Coel’s pieces. It is also a part of the Worth Their Weight collection.

20230503_EmefaCole-Vertical.jpg
When styling Michaela Coel for the Met Gala, jewelry designer Emefa Cole said she took inspiration from only one place, Coel's desire to be "dripping in gold." (Photo credit/courtesy of Emefa Cole and Getty Images)


Inspired by the theme for the gala, Cole said the brooch, comprised of solid gold from the pin to the hook, is “really a line of beauty.”

“It’s a really beautiful story for us, for the V&A as well, to have Tristram wearing the brooch. It really does align with our values as a museum and being more mindful of where materials are coming from and supporting sustainable companies and mining regions around the world,” Cole said. “For the director to be wearing this is truly special.”

As for Michaela Coel, Cole said, “I was really touched that she only wanted to wear my jewelry.”

A deliberate choice by all, Cole’s jewelry allowed responsibly sourced, traceable gold to be front and center at what is considered fashion’s biggest night worldwide. 

The Latest

Leonard Zell
MajorsAug 26, 2024
Longtime Industry Sales Trainer Lenny Zell Dies at 97

Said to be the first to write a jewelry sales manual for the industry, Zell is remembered for his zest for life.

IWC Schaffhausen Pilot’s Watch Chronograph Edition Polaris Dawn
WatchesAug 26, 2024
IWC Is Sending Its Watches to Space

The company outfitted the Polaris Dawn spaceflight crew with watches that will later be auctioned off to benefit St. Jude’s.

Abernethy Pearl in loose form
AuctionsAug 23, 2024
Abernethy Pearl Tops Estimates at Auction

A buyer paid more than $100,000 for the gemstone known as “Little Willie,” setting a new auction record for a Scottish freshwater pearl.

Supplier Spotlight -Recorded-Webinar.png
Brought to you by
Watch: Natural Diamonds: A Great (but Often Untold) Geology Story

Supplier Spotlight Sponsored by GIA.

Gumuchian’s Spectrum Necklace
CollectionsAug 23, 2024
Piece of the Week: Gumuchian’s Colorful ‘Spectrum’ Necklace

Anita Gumuchian created the 18-karat yellow gold necklace using 189 carats of colored gemstones she spent the last 40 years collecting.

Weekly QuizAug 23, 2024
This Week’s Quiz
Test your jewelry news knowledge by answering these questions.
Take the Quiz
2,492 carat rough diamond
SourcingAug 22, 2024
2,492-Carat Diamond Recovered From Botswana Diamond Mine

The giant gem came from Karowe, the same mine that yielded the 1,109-carat Lesedi La Rona and the 1,758-carat Sewelô diamond.

Kaley Cuoco, Tom Pelphrey, Matilda Pelphrey, and the engagement ring
TrendsAug 22, 2024
Kaley Cuoco Has a Three-Stone Engagement Ring With a Twist

The three-stone ring was designed by Shahla Karimi Jewelry and represents Cuoco, her fiancé Tom Pelphrey, and their child.

Supplier Spotlight -Recorded-Webinar.png
Brought to you by
Watch: Forging the Next Generation of Skilled Bench Jewelers at GIA

Supplier Spotlight Sponsored by GIA

Xarissa B Greenwich St Jewelers collection
CollectionsAug 22, 2024
Greenwich St. Jewelers Collabs with TikTok Jewelry Content Creator

The Manhattan jewelry store has partnered with Xarissa B. of Jewel Boxing on a necklace capsule collection.

Instagram Notes
TechnologyAug 21, 2024
Instagram’s Notes Feature Expands to Posts, Reels

Acting as temporary virtual Post-it notes, Notes are designed to help strengthen mutual connections, not reach new audiences.

Carol Woolton
TrendsAug 21, 2024
Carol Woolton To Release New Book

The jewelry historian discusses the history and cultural significance of jewelry throughout time and across the globe.

State Property diamond and jet black enamel earrings
TrendsAug 21, 2024
Amanda’s Style File: Shimmy and Shake

From fringe and tassels to pieces that give the illusion they are in motion, jewelry with movement is trending.

Jan Yager
IndependentsAug 20, 2024
Mixed-Media Jewelry Artist Jan Yager Dies at 72

The designer and maker found community around her Philadelphia studio and creative inspiration on the sidewalks below it.

National Jeweler columnist Emmanuel Raheb
ColumnistsAug 20, 2024
Google Ads Payment Policy Change: What It Means For You

The change to accepted payment methods for Google Ads might seem like an irritation but actually is an opportunity, Emmanuel Raheb writes.

Pat Henneberry
IndependentsAug 20, 2024
Pat Henneberry Releases Memoir

The industry consultant’s new book focuses on what she learned as an athlete recovering from a broken back.

Cut and rough colored gemstones
Events & AwardsAug 20, 2024
The Ethical Gem Fair Is Going to California

The fair will take place on the West Coast for the first time, hosted by Altana Fine Jewelry in Oakland, California.

Kathy Hillelson, new WJA Foundation board member
MajorsAug 20, 2024
Kathy Hillelson Joins Board of WJA Foundation

Hillelson is a second-generation diamantaire and CEO of Owl Financial Group.

 2025 Gem Awards logo
Events & AwardsAug 19, 2024
Nominations Are Open for the 2025 Gem Awards

Submissions in the categories of Jewelry Design, Media Excellence, and Retail Excellence will be accepted through this Friday, Aug. 23.

Abernethy Pearl in a shell
AuctionsAug 19, 2024
Scotland’s Famed Abernethy Pearl Is Up for Sale

Known as “Little Willie,” it’s the largest freshwater pearl found in recent history in Scotland and is notable for its shape and color.

Clements Jewelers employees
IndependentsAug 19, 2024
Kentucky Jeweler Closing After 89 Years

Clements Jewelers in Madisonville cited competition from larger retailers and online sellers as the driving factor.

A and C Gem Trading Corp.
SourcingAug 19, 2024
A&C Gem Trading Corp. Relocates, Opens Wholesale Showroom

The gemstone company is moving to the Ross Metal Exchange in New York City’s Diamond District.

Green Vault Museum jewelry display
CrimeAug 16, 2024
Jewels Stolen During Green Vault Heist Back on Display

Most of the 18th century royal jewelry taken from the Green Vault Museum in Dresden, Germany, in 2019 went back on display this week.

Louis Anthony Jewelers
IndependentsAug 16, 2024
Louis Anthony Jewelers Announces First Resort Store

The Pittsburgh jeweler has opened a store in the nearby Nemacolin resort.

Jonne Amaya Cat Claw Necklace
CollectionsAug 16, 2024
Piece of the Week: Jonne Amaya’s ‘Cat Claw’ Necklace

With a 40-carat cabochon emerald, this necklace is as powerful and elegant as a cat.

Ross and Stefanie Wesdorp
Events & AwardsAug 16, 2024
IJO Names Jewel-Craft as VIP Vendor of the Year

The Erlanger, Kentucky-based company was recognized for its reliability when it comes to repairs and fast turnaround times.

Greenland Ruby mine
SourcingAug 15, 2024
Greenland Ruby Is Up For Sale

Unable to pay its debts, the ruby and sapphire miner is looking to restructure and become a “competitive and attractive” company.

Paola De Luca presenting her Trendbook
TrendsAug 15, 2024
Paola De Luca to Debut Trendbook 2026+ at Vicenzaoro

The trend forecaster’s latest guide has intel on upcoming trends in the jewelry market.

×

This site uses cookies to give you the best online experience. By continuing to use & browse this site, we assume you agree to our Privacy Policy