23/12/2020
I'm all done, my last job for 2020 has been collected, bench is swept down, am ready to leave and lock the door on this strangest of years.
It was 1972 when I started my apprenticeship so 48 years in the trade and in that time so much has changed. Gone are the big outfits like Garrard & Co of 112 Regent Street which was a store I used to visit 5 days a week and collect work in a canvas holdall from all the departments, jewellery, watches, military, then head back to RH Wilkins in Hatton Garden on a No19 or a No38 bus. Often there would be boxes of 9ct and 18ct Rolex and Omega watches in that canvas bag but it was always the bus I was expected to use as the gaffer Ray would not pay for a taxi! Mappin and Webb, Asprey's, Carrington's, all pretty big outfits and most had a visit daily to pick up and collect, yet most have gone in all but name. These days I only work for family businesses, no chains, it's more like a cottage industry when compared to what used to be. Is that a good or bad thing? I think we need a healthy mix of big and small and these days we only have the relatively small.
Back in '72 I do not recall ever coming across a lady jeweller or silversmith, it was an almost exclusively male trade. These days no longer are the ladies just 'front of house' but most of the younger craftspeople I work with are women and their numbers include my own daughter Vickie. I'm all for equality and the ladies bring a welcome touch of artistry and finesse to the trade which has to be good.
Covid-19 came close to home back in March when my neighbor who ran 'The Candy Shop' next door to my workshop died, not of the disease itself but as collateral damage. Chris was my age and a very nice man but he had a heart condition and was due to have a pacemaker fitted in the spring. His operation got cancelled due to the pandemic and just a couple of weeks after his due date he suffered a fatal heart attack. He ran that shop most of his adult life and now it stands empty as a reminder that Covid is responsible for way more casualties that the official figures suggest. RIP Chris.