Opulent, One-of-a-Kind, Sustainable Jewelry

About

The designer’s global accumulation of baubles breathes new life into unusual — sometimes sinister — custom creations. From antique earrings from a local antique mall, to precious gemstones gathered in Istanbul, Lake combines pieces from across the centuries for a timeless aesthetic. 

--Aimee Blanchette

 

 

Stephanie Lake is the fifth person in the world to hold a PhD in decorative arts, design history, and material culture. Oh, and she worked for Sotheby’s and is the heir to the Bonnie Cashin archive (she was friends with the late, great, iconic designer). This, of course, perfectly primes her for having her own design collections. Otherworldly in their beauty and detail, they are wholly unlike anything else, combining design elements of Hollywood Regency, mid-century, 70s-era Fleetwood Mac, and glam rock. Lake is a stylemaker in a class of her own.  

--Katie Dohman

 Each Stephanie Lake piece is an original design, sustainable and one of a kind, incorporating centuries of source materials

The fifth scholar in the world to earn a Ph.D. in Decorative Arts, Design History, and Material Culture, Dr. Stephanie Lake’s opulent, sustainable, and one-of-a-kind jewelry is informed by her work as a curator, archivist, auction specialist and fashion heir as well as in response to the profound impact of living with type 1 diabetes. Lake’s commitment to splendor is anchored in a personal sense of wonder, curiosity, beauty, and purpose.

Lake's academic focus on decorative arts from the 18th century to the current day centered on personal adornment and aesthetic choices made by elite and intellectual circles. Her curatorial work included stints in Paris, London, Istanbul, Tokyo, New York and Los Angeles, working with some of the world’s most extraordinary collections and collectors.

 

 

Lake's career began with a Vogue article featuring the Sotheby’s Fashion Department. Soon after filing the clipping under the heading “dream job,” Lake moved to New York and became a research consultant at the storied auction house where she studied couture while earning her Masters Degree at the Bard Graduate Center.

Lake’s work at Sotheby’s as well as research for the millennium exhibition “Women Designers in America, 1900-2000” and a summer of studying 18th-century costume at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum led to a friendship with the "mother" of American sportswear, iconic fashion designer Bonnie Cashin (ca. 1908-2000).

Heralded as a classic New York Story, the New York Times Magazine commissioned a lengthy article from Lake about her days spent with her "big sister."  Next, The Fashion Institute of Technology asked Lake to curate a blockbuster exhibition of Cashin’s work which was followed by partnering with Coach for their first-ever retrospective in Japan, centered on Cashin's pioneering work for Sills & Co, Ballantyne, and Coach in the sixties.  Upon Cashin's death, Lake inherited the designer's personal effects and entire personal design archive.

 

 

As the sole owner of the Bonnie Cashin Archive, Lake established the Bonnie Cashin Foundation to create a network of philanthropic gifts in Cashin's name.  Lake is the author of the definitive Cashin monograph, Bonnie Cashin: Chic is Where You Find It (Rizzoli).  Upon its publication, it was heralded as "shining a “white light on one of the most brilliant designing minds of any century . . . the bar has been raised.”    

 

Lake in her Bonnie Cashin Archive.

 

After beginning her doctoral study in decorative arts, Lake’s curatorial work took her around the globe and also to her hometown of Minneapolis. There Lake reunited with and married her high school crush, Cory Lake.  The couple divided their time between the Twin Cities and Los Angeles, where Lake negotiated the donation of Cashin's professional papers to UCLA and worked as curator-in-charge of this collection. The two share one daughter, Odette.

  

 

Lake's work has been featured internationally in many publications including Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, Elle, nationally in fashion and design-related podcasts including Dressed, and in her home state, heralded several times over as the Best Jewelry Designer.  A historic commission from the Minneapolis Institute of Art set Lake's work alongside the acclaimed centennial exhibition "Hapsburg Splendor: Masterpieces from Vienna's Imperial Collections."  

 

Lake’s jewelry is sold online and by appointment.  

 

For more information, please call 612.802.3605 or email lake@stephanielakedesign.com.