Collective Designs

Collective Designs I work as both a designer and jewellery broker, ensuring every piece, whether simple or complex, carries meaning. Jewellery marks life’s milestones.

Love, loss, growth, celebration. Sharing those journeys is my passion, and it’s why I do what I do.

Pearls have always carried a different kind of presence to other gemstones.They’re softer, quieter, and never really abo...
02/06/2026

Pearls have always carried a different kind of presence to other gemstones.

They’re softer, quieter, and never really about sparkle in the traditional sense, which is probably why people either instantly connect with them… or they don’t.

Traditionally, pearls are associated with wisdom, intuition, calmness, and emotional balance. They’re also connected to June birthdays and are often linked with Cancer energy, which feels fitting given how sentimental and emotionally connected that sign tends to be.

What I find interesting is that pearls rarely feel purely traditional anymore.

When they’re designed well, they can feel incredibly modern, personal, and understated in a way that doesn’t try too hard.

And that’s usually the kind of jewellery people continue wearing for years.

Not because it’s loud, but because it feels timeless in a quieter way.

I’m incredibly grateful for the journeys I get to share with my clients.Every piece carries its own story, but it’s also...
28/05/2026

I’m incredibly grateful for the journeys I get to share with my clients.

Every piece carries its own story, but it’s also the conversations, trust, emotions, and experiences along the way that stay with me long after the piece is finished.

That’s the part that means the most.

One of my favourite engagement ring stories started with bees.A young woman came to me wanting to propose to her girlfri...
25/05/2026

One of my favourite engagement ring stories started with bees.

A young woman came to me wanting to propose to her girlfriend, and she already knew one thing for certain… she wanted the ring to reflect something meaningful to them both.

Bees had always been part of their relationship, so instead of starting with a standard design, we started there.

The other thing she knew was that her girlfriend loved a bit of bling.

So while the design carried all these subtle bee and honeycomb elements through it, it also needed to have presence. The oval diamond became the body of the bee, with wing-like details through the setting and enough sparkle that it still felt exciting the moment she opened the box.

What I loved most was that it still felt elegant and wearable, not novelty.

That balance is important.

Because the best engagement rings aren’t just designed around trends or what’s popular at the time. They’re designed around the people wearing them and the things that matter to them specifically.

The proposal itself was a complete surprise, and afterwards I was flooded with photos and messages about how overwhelmed she was by the thought that had gone into it.

That’s the part that stays with people.
Not just the ring, but feeling within it.

Save this for later if you love the idea of creating something deeply personal from the beginning.

People are often drawn to emeralds before they even know why.There’s something about them that feels different from othe...
22/05/2026

People are often drawn to emeralds before they even know why.

There’s something about them that feels different from other gemstones. Softer. Deeper. Less about sparkle and more about presence.

Traditionally, emeralds have been connected to love, growth, wisdom, and renewal, but what I find interesting is how personal people become about colour when they’re choosing a stone.

Some clients are immediately drawn to emeralds because they remind them of nature, the ocean, a place, a memory, or even someone important to them. Others simply love that they don’t feel overly polished or predictable.

And that’s the thing with gemstones.

The meaning isn’t always found in a textbook definition. Sometimes it’s about what you’re personally drawn to and why.

That’s why I spend so much time helping clients work through stones properly, because often the gemstone becomes the part they connect to most.

Not just visually, but emotionally as well.

An emerald doesn’t suit everyone. That’s never the goal.
The right stone is the one that feels like you from the beginning.

20/05/2026

Most people think they need to have the whole engagement ring figured out before we start.
You really don’t.

Some people come with screenshots, some with one clear idea, and some just know they don’t want something generic or off-the-shelf.

That’s usually where the real process begins.

Because designing an engagement ring isn’t just about choosing a diamond or a setting. It’s about understanding what you’re drawn to, how you want the piece to feel, and creating something that reflects the relationship behind it.

That’s the difference between choosing a ring and creating one.

Book a consultation when you’re ready to start exploring ideas.

A client came to me wanting to create something special for her daughter’s 60th birthday using her own wedding ring and ...
18/05/2026

A client came to me wanting to create something special for her daughter’s 60th birthday using her own wedding ring and her late husband’s ring.

There was a lot of emotion attached to the process from the beginning. Not just because of the rings themselves, but because she wanted to create something meaningful while she was still here to be part of it.

What made it even more special was that her daughter became part of the design process too.

Together, we worked through what felt right, what mattered most, and how to create something that carried the story forward in a way she could wear every day.

The final piece included small heart details representing her mum, dad, and late sister, along with a ruby to mark her 60th birthday.

But what I loved most was that the story didn’t stop there.

There was enough gold left to create additional pieces for future generations of the family, including pendants for future granddaughter-in-laws to wear on their wedding days.

That’s the part I care about most with heirloom redesign.

You’re not just creating a piece for now. You’re creating something that continues the story long after the original jewellery was first worn.

If you’ve inherited jewellery that feels too important to leave sitting away, that’s often where these conversations begin.

People often ask what makes a piece feel timeless.It’s not really about following a certain style, or keeping things sim...
15/05/2026

People often ask what makes a piece feel timeless.

It’s not really about following a certain style, or keeping things simple for the sake of it.

What I’ve found over the years is that the pieces that last are the ones that feel right for the person from the beginning.

Not what’s trending at the time, or what they feel like they should choose, but what they’re actually drawn to.

That’s the part that doesn’t date.

Because when something is shaped around you, your preferences, your lifestyle, even how you wear it day to day, it tends to stay relevant without needing to be changed.

That’s what I focus on when I’m designing.

Not just how something looks now, but whether it will still feel like you in ten or twenty years’ time.

If that’s right, the piece tends to take care of itself.

Save this if you’re starting to think about creating something of your own.

Some of the most meaningful pieces I’ve worked on have started with jewellery from a mother.Pieces worn every day for ye...
13/05/2026

Some of the most meaningful pieces I’ve worked on have started with jewellery from a mother.

Pieces worn every day for years. Pieces tied to memories, routines, stages of life… sometimes even things people didn’t fully appreciate until much later.

And what’s interesting is that it’s rarely about the value of the piece itself.
It’s about what it carries with it.

A lot of people inherit jewellery and leave it sitting safely away because they don’t quite know what to do with it, but they also can’t imagine letting it go.

That’s usually because the meaning matters more than the piece.

I think that’s why redesigning heirloom jewellery can feel so special when it’s done properly. You’re not erasing the story, you’re carrying it forward in a way that can still be worn, shared, and connected to everyday life.

Especially when it comes from someone important.

Mother’s Day always seems to bring those conversations up.

Share this with someone who would understand💖💖

The new website is live… and I’m excited to finally share it!Putting it together made me realise just how much this work...
04/05/2026

The new website is live… and I’m excited to finally share it!

Putting it together made me realise just how much this work has evolved over the years.

Not just in the designs, but in the people, the conversations, and the stories I’ve been trusted with along the way. There have been a lot of them.

When I first started, it was very much about jewellery. What I’ve come to understand over time is that it’s never really about the piece itself. It’s about what sits behind it, what someone is trying to hold onto, mark, or move forward from.

That’s what shaped this website redesign.

This new look reflects this more clearly. It’s simpler, more considered, and gives more room to the stories and the pieces that come from them, not just as finished pieces, but as something that’s been created through conversation.

Nothing I do is chosen from what already exists. Each piece is shaped around the person it’s being made for, and the moment it represents.

That’s the part I’ve always been drawn to… and it feels like this is the first time it’s been properly captured.

It feels like the right step forward for Collective Designs.

And I love it! Have a look: www.collectivedesigns.com.au

It’s usually the obvious moments, the big birthdays and the anniversaries that actually mean something, but what you don...
30/04/2026

It’s usually the obvious moments, the big birthdays and the anniversaries that actually mean something, but what you don’t want is the obvious way of marking them.

Sometimes you don’t want to walk into a store and choose something that could belong to anyone. You want something that reflects what that moment really means to you, and that’s where it can feel a bit unclear.

Because it’s not just about finding a piece, it’s about working out what you’re actually trying to hold onto or recognise, and how to turn that into something you can wear.

That’s usually where I come in.

We work through what matters, what’s changed, and what feels right now, and from there the piece starts to take shape. Not chosen from what’s already there, but created around you and the moment itself.

If you’ve got something coming up that feels worth marking, but you’re not quite sure how to approach it, that’s usually where this starts.

Address

Erina, NSW
2250

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+61 2 4367 3922

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