Sara Golden Jewelry

Behind the Scenes

Queen of the Nile

Inspiration, Behind the ScenesSara GoldenComment

Finding inspiration for a new collection never seems to be straightforward. Instead, my brain quietly logs away bits of information it comes across — a beautiful photograph, an unusual color combination, a scene from a movie that I can’t stop thinking about — until some of those seemingly random bits find each other and click together, suddenly forming a clear idea for a new jewelry.

Top to bottom, left to right: Beauty editorial from Harper’s Bazaar; Cleopatra’s cartouche (her name spelled in an enclosed oval shape) carved in a temple wall, photo by Trevor Lowe; Wall painting with the goddess Hathor, The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Fashion editorial from Harper’s Bazaar shot by Txema Yeste; “Egypt painted and described” by Robert Talbot Kelly, 1902; Necklace of pendants and beads from 1330 B.C., British Museum; Finger Ring depicting King Akhenaten and Queen Nefertiti, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Last January a few of those moments my brain had been storing away came together: a recent trip to The Met’s Temple of Dendur; thumbing through an issue of Harper’s Bazaar and seeing an image of woman in a long, flowing dress flanked by the columns of temple ruins; the saturated blues and greens of a new stone I’d just discovered; a passage in “Stoned” by Aja Raden about Egypt’s emerald mines. They all melded together into the idea of Cleopatra, the last queen of Egypt, and how she would adorn herself.

“Queen of the Nile” imagines Cleopatra having escaped to her desert palace where she can forget about her royal responsibilities for a moment. There she doesn’t need ceremonial necklaces or over-the-top headdresses, but more casual jewelry that’s artfully crafted from luxurious materials.

Left (the inspiration): Ancient Egyptian glass and electrum necklace, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Ancient Roman ring from 1-200 A.D. in gold, pearl, and emerald, Bibliothèque nationale de France; Lapis scarab carving, source unknown; Right (the new designs): Hathor Ring; Aten Necklace with pearls; Khepri Scarab Necklace in brass

Left (the inspiration): Ancient Egyptian glass and electrum necklace, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Ancient Roman ring from 1-200 A.D. in gold, pearl, and emerald, Bibliothèque nationale de France; Lapis scarab carving, source unknown; Right (the new designs): Hathor Ring; Aten Necklace with pearls; Khepri Scarab Necklace in brass

With that idea in my head, I wanted to feature stones found in Cleopatra’s Egypt, like peridot, emerald, and carnelian, and wanted to use pearls which were incredibly rare during her time. There’s an apocryphal story I love about Cleopatra showing off her power and wealth to Marc Anthony by dissolving a pearl in a glass of wine, as if to say, “I could get a dozen more of these if I felt like it.”

I was inspired by the Egyptian jewelry found at The Met, featuring golden amulets strung between beautiful stone beads. I wanted to blend Egyptian motifs like the scarab, symbolizing renewal and rebirth, with Roman elements like metal beading. And carving these new pieces in wax gave everything a hand-wrought feel, like it was just discovered after centuries buried in the sand.

Top to bottom, left to right: Shell and carnelian necklace from 1802–1640 B.C., The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Etruscan finger ring from 525 - 330 B.C., Thorvaldsens Museum; My Selene Studs in spiny oyster with copper; My Selene Bracelet with pearls and carnelian

Left (the inspiration): Shell and carnelian necklace from 1802–1640 B.C., The Metropolitan Museum of Art; Etruscan finger ring from 525 - 330 B.C., Thorvaldsens Museum; Right (the new designs): Selene Studs in spiny oyster with copper; Selene Bracelet with pearls and carnelian

My hope is that this collection is a new, wearable take on a rich and ancient past. But most importantly, I hope you fall in love with it like I have, and that it brings you a little bit of joy every time you wear one of these pieces.

Making Molly’s Earrings

In the Studio, Behind the ScenesSara GoldenComment
Left: Molly and Andrew walking down the aisle, photo by Meghan Baskin; Right: Molly’s custom earrings

Left: Molly and Andrew walking down the aisle, photo by Meghan Baskin; Right: Molly’s custom earrings


I’m always so honored when a bride asks me to make something special for her wedding day — I remember how important it was for me to get every detail from my own wedding right, so I know how special it is to pick the jewelry you’ll wear.

This spring Molly reached out to me about making earrings for her wedding, and I was thrilled! She wanted something with a pearl, and something bigger than the Baroque Pearl Drop earrings (little did she know my favorite thing to hear is, “Can we go bigger?”). I immediately got to sketching, she picked her favorite design, and we made a few final tweaks. Next we found the perfect pair of pearls, and I got busy on the rest.

Left: Carving the rough shapes out of wax; Right: The wax after lots of fine-tuning

Left: Carving the rough shapes out of wax; Right: The wax after lots of fine-tuning

Molly’s earrings started out as thick blocks of wax that I cut down into the rough shapes I wanted. I used small files to refine the shape more, including all the contours. I carved the top setting so a pearl could sit safely inside, made sure the bottom drops wouldn’t be too heavy, and cast them all in brass. Finally I plated them in 14k gold, which really made them sparkle. 

Left: A close-up shot of Molly’s earrings; Right: Molly just before her wedding, photo by Meghan Baskin

Left: A close-up shot of Molly’s earrings; Right: Molly just before her wedding, photo by Meghan Baskin

I enjoyed the whole process of making these earrings, but loved seeing Molly wearing them even more. She looked stunning on her wedding day (those sleeves! that lip color!!), and the earrings complimented her look beautifully. 

I hope she and Andrew husband spend many blissful years together, and that happy wedding day memories come flooding back every time she puts them on.

Birthstone Star Necklace Inspiration

Inspiration, Behind the ScenesSara GoldenComment
Image credits, clockwise from top left: sketch from from Galileo's Sidereus Nuncius; found image of an antique plate via Pinterest; detail of Gucci gown from Spring 2017; "Stars of the Ocean," photo by Marit Hettinga via Flickr; personal photo …

Image credits, clockwise from top left: sketch from from Galileo's Sidereus Nuncius; found image of an antique plate via Pinterest; detail of Gucci gown from Spring 2017; "Stars of the Ocean," photo by Marit Hettinga via Flickr; personal photo taken in upstate New York; detail of ceiling fresco by Giotto.


I’m so happy to share that I just added upgrades to the Birthstone Star Necklaces — in addition to solid sterling silver, you can now also choose from brass with gold-fill chain, or solid 14k gold.

In honor of these new materials, I wanted to revisit the inspiration behind the Star Signet Rings and Birthstone Star Necklace: a single, slightly off-kilter star that might have been found in Galileo’s notebooks, or hidden in the sparkle of warm sunlight hitting the water.

Want to see how this inspiration became the final pieces? Check out the newly upgraded Birthstone Star Necklaces, and the Star Signet Rings in aquamarine or pearl.

Starscape Inspiration

Inspiration, Behind the ScenesSara GoldenComment

Image credits, clockwise starting top left: Hubble Space Telescope photo of part of Sagittarius, ESA/Hubble & NASA; Fashion editorial from 2017, source unknown; Comet illustration by Lyn Ward; “Winter Full Moon” engraving, Johannes Hevelius; Cast cairn in brass, Cast Cairn in brass, Joseph Magliaro; “Moon Dust (Apollo 17)” installation, Spencer Finch.


Two years ago I saw a photo (the top left one, actually) taken by the Hubble Space Telescope and became immediately obsessed. It shows stars in a rainbow of colors, sparkling against the deep black of space. That image immediately made me want to recreate it, using colorful semi-precious stones against a dark metal background. 

And then I fell down a rabbit hole of space photography, space-inspired fashion spreads, and Galileo's original drawings of constellations (I'm not sure I'm fully out of it yet). Sketches came together fast, and before I knew it I was carving (and re-carving, and re-carving again) shapes out of wax, testing out different stone colors, and setting mini constellations into all new pieces. 

If you haven’t seen the new Starscape Collection yet, check it out here — I’d love to know if you can see how the inspiration became the finished jewelry!