David
Forlano is an art couture jeweler who collaborates with longtime friend and
artisan Steve Ford and Maryanne Petrus to create designs that are displayed and
available for purchase in upscale craft galleries throughout
“I was talking to a filmmaker about Cyphers and I
said, what seems to be important about Cyphers is it is not a film, it is an
unknown, film like, web like thing. It is on the web and it is a webisode. It
very much reminds me of when I forged the way with my jewelry business as a
complete unknown. I stepped into this world that was kind of known, but I got to
step into it and say I’m going to redefine the rules about what jewelry is. That
is my position with making jewelry, so with Cyphers we can redefine what
filmmaking and what storytelling is with this project. To take it even further
as to what Cyphers is, there is this concept called trans media, which is
storyboarding or storytelling across all media, whether you are making a novel,
a film or a song. All of these pieces constantly tell the story. The web is a
place where there are a lot of different types of media and where people tell
stories. The video of Cyphers can act as one aspect of the story and then we can
branch out from that and we can continue to tell the story and we can flesh out
the details with other sources and in other ways,” says Forlano.
Forlano and Ford have developed solid relationships with designers such as
Alli-Coosh, “She
has been interesting and she is one of our really unique clients. She sends us
fabric swatches, thread swatches for everything that is up and coming and what
she is going to have next season in her store. She sends us the colors and in
some cases the fabrics may have a certain texture that we want to refer to in
our jewelry. We will make things specifically for her line and to work with her
clothing, which I think is a fantastic way to work, when she has access to the
maker of the jewelry and when the jeweler is willing to work with that kind of a
palette, which we are. We love the challenge and it is really great that she
does that,” says Forlano
David Forlano says that
the art jewelry that they create is properly defined as couture, as it very
unique to them and each piece is different. “Our challenge is to stay on top of
the game and to keep inventing. We have a certain look and when people see us
they know us by name, just as it is with famous dress designers. People, who
know that world, will look at a dress and they will know the designer. That is
where we stand, in the American craft jewelry world.
David
Forlano and Steve Ford have come a long way from when they first met at the
“We found the polymer clay through a friend of
Steve’s and we said, let’s get some of the clay, mess around with it, figure out
what it does and find out what is interesting to us. That is what we did day and
night and we were obsessed with this idea that we were going to make a business
and that we were going to make a jewelry business out of it.
That is how we were introduced to it, because
a friend of Steve’s who was making little earrings and pins out of it said, that
we might come up with some interesting ideas, so he introduced us to the
material and some of the technique. Steve and I are the types that are never
satisfied with the last thing that we did, so we kept pushing the technique
further and further and it really just snowballed into a business, before we
knew what we were doing as a business. We were selling stuff to every little
surf shop, craft galleries, museum shops. We made things, put them into a
cardboard box and we walked into galleries cold and we said, ‘We made these, do
you want to buy them?’ (he laughs) We didn’t know. Are there channels that you
go through? We just walked right up to the counter and a lot of the times we
were talking to someone who really wasn’t in a position to do the buying for the
store. They would say, call so and so or come back on this day when the owner is
in. We didn’t know anything about the whole craft jewelry industry, but we were
open to learning, so when we did sell things, we would go back to that store and
we would ask what people liked. Did they like more things in red or purple? That
helped hone in on what was working and what was not. We did that for the first
ten or twelve years of our business,” he recalls.
Continuing to describe
how Steve Ford and he work together, David Forlano says, “Steve thinks about the
structure and how things go together, sort of the three dimensional qualities of
the objects. This was true of his painting when I met him. I thought it was
really interesting, because he wasn’t thinking as much about surface and color,
as much as he was thinking about the object of the painting and I think that
follows right through to the jewelry. He will say to me, you are the color guy,
I don’t really know color. I will say that is interesting, because it is not
that you do not know color, you have a very unique and interesting window on
what color is. I find that intriguing and a good springboard for me. My part of
the work tends to be the surface, patterns, colors and that kind of thing. We
work well in that kind of tension, but we also cross over now and again and we
sort of riff off each other, which yields very interesting results as well. We
are always going to do it differently than we think the other person did it, so
it blossoms into a whole new line of work or a new way of working with the
material.”
For those who may not
be familiar with polymer clay, Forlano takes time to explain that it comes in a
wide range of colors and from what he recalls, it originated in Germany, where
it was used for making the heads, feet and hands of dolls. Part of the
attraction for working with polymer clay is it will bake at 300 degrees
Fahrenheit, it is readily accessible in craft stores and he says with just one
lesson, children can usually make something with which they are happy.
Recently, David Forlano
and Steve Ford have drifted back to their roots. “Steve was actually more of a
print maker than a painter by the end of art school. I started focusing on
painting. Steve started getting back into printing and I was simultaneously
getting back into painting on my own and he was on his own. I said to Steve that
we should consider collaborating on the print painting concepts. I said send me
your prints and I will paint on them or I will paint into them. He was really
excited, because he was just printing to get the ball rolling and he really
didn’t have a focus yet. We are such good collaborators and we have been
collaborating for so long that it was a very easy transition. We are still
exploring that and it is something that we are having a great time with. It is
nice to come back to painting and I really enjoy that. We are exploring that
right now. They are printed on very heavy paper. We draw a lot of inspiration
from textiles and patterns.”
Bottom Photo: 1964 Ribbon Pin, 2010 Polymer Clay and sterling silver
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