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 Birmingham Jewellery Quarter: Lbb London Designer Cufflinks


Now occupying a space in the famous Birmigham Jewellery quarter is the London Badge and Button Company owned by Toye Group of companies. The London Badge and Button Company has over 30 years of experience in design and development of fine silver-gilt and silver designer cufflinks for high fashion men's accessories retailers.

Toye, Kenning and Spencer are one of the oldest family run businesses in the world, having been established in England over 300 years ago by a family of Huguenot refugees the Toyés. 1685 members of the Toye family have been using their skills to create fine identity products for both the civil and military markets.

The company has excelled in the making and stamping of medals and insignia in the last 200 years, and they possess great expertise in the application of vitreous enamel and enamel painting for insignia, and jewellery production. Their craftsmen and women combine the traditional skills of working in precious and non-precious metals with today’s modern technology to produce a vast array of quality products.

The product range has expanded considerably over the years and now includes: medals, enamelled badges, civic & society’s regalia, ceremonial chains, traditional handcrafted enamels, corporate jewellery, awards, and trophies. The also offers a free design service; designing and manufacturing products to customers’ exact requirements, and excels in one off bespoke products and small run production. They are also able to undertake the specialised service of renovation and refurbishment of presentation jewels and pendants of office.

KJD Jewellers is also part of the Toye family they manufacture hand crafted, very high quality vitreous enamel on precious metal designer cufflinks, to supply Jewellers and high end retail outlets the world. Enamelling has its own unique history in Jewellery that stems back many hundreds of years. Here is a very brief, summarised history.

The word enamel comes from the High German word “smelzan” later becoming “esmail” in Old French. Hence the current usage of “smalto” in Italian, “email” in French and German and “enamel” in English.

It is thus defined as a vitreous, glass like coating fused on to a metallic base. In history, enamels were initially applied gold, then silver, copper, bronze and more latterly on iron and steel. The term is also used for the application of decorative fusible glass applied to glass objects.

The earliest known enamelled objects were made in Cyprus in around the 13th century BC during the Mycenae period. Six gold rings discovered in a Mycenae tomb at Kouklia were decorated with various vitreous coloured layers fused on to the gold.

Now in modern times enamels are used to decorate cufflinks of all shapes and sizes using traditional methods supported by modern technology, often combined with Swarovski Crystals, another favourite amongst jewellery designers.




























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