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  2. Jewellery Quarter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewellery_Quarter

    The Jewellery Quarter is an area of central Birmingham, England, in the north-western area of Birmingham City Centre, with a population of 19,000 [1] in a 1.07-square-kilometre (264-acre) area. [ 2 ] The Jewellery Quarter is Europe's largest concentration of businesses involved in the jewellery trade and produces 40% of all the jewellery made ...

  3. Museum of the Jewellery Quarter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_the_Jewellery...

    The museum opened in 1992 [5] originally as the Jewellery Quarter Discovery Centre, as part of the city's Heritage Development Plan. [6] [7] It preserves this 'time capsule' of a jewellery workshop [8] [9] and also tells the 200-year story of the Birmingham Jewellery Quarter, the centre of the British jewellery industry, and its traditional craft skills.

  4. Thomas Fattorini Ltd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Fattorini_Ltd

    Thomas Fattorini Ltd is a manufacturing jeweller and designer-maker of awards, trophies, ceremonial swords, civic insignia, medals and name badges. The company is located on three sites in Manchester, Birmingham and London with their head office in Skipton, North Yorkshire.

  5. Fattorini & Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fattorini_&_Sons

    Fattorini & Sons Ltd was a jewellery business established by a family of Italian immigrants who arrived in the British city of Leeds, in Yorkshire, England in the early 19th century. [1] Antonio Fattorini opened a shop in Harrogate to take advantage of seasonal trade in Harrogate in 1831, this business is today owned and run by descendants of ...

  6. Smith and Pepper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smith_and_Pepper

    The doors were closed and locked on a Friday and the building was subsequently sold to the Birmingham City Council.It was several years before the doors were reopened, and the council employees discovered a virtual time capsule of jewellery production, and techniques, as well as more personal work life related items some dating back as far as 1899.

  7. Argent Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argent_Centre

    The Argent Centre is a Grade II* listed building on the corner of Frederick Street and Legge Road in the Jewellery Quarter of Birmingham, England.. Designed by J. G. Bland for W. E. Wiley, a manufacturer of gold pens; it was built in 1863, and acquired the name Albert Works, possibly because it was opposite the Victoria Works of Joseph Gillott.