Western Living Magazine
Mood Board: 5 Things That Keep Studio Roslyn Inspired
6 Homes with Super-Stylish Floors
This Mid-Century Modern Palm Springs Home Renovation Is Pitch Perfect
Recipe: Gingery Citrusy Sangria
Composed Winter Beet and Citrus Salad
Recipe: Meyer Lemon Scones
Editors’ Picks: Our Favourite Western Living Travel Stories of 2024
Winter Getaway Guide 2024: Wine, Bavarian Charm and Luxe Lodging Without the Skis
Local Winter Getaway 2024: A Non-Skier’s Guide to the Perfect Whistler Weekend
The Best Home Accessories Our Editors Bought This Year
Editors’ Picks: The Best Books of 2024
What the Editors of Western Living Are Asking For This Christmas
Over 50% Sold! Grab Your Tickets to Our Western Living Design 25 Party Now
Join Us for Our First Western Living Design 25 Party!
Announcing the Finalists for the 2025 Western Living Design 25 Awards
Jewellery designer Becki Chans twisting career path comes full circle in meticulous, mindful pieces.
Fashion designer Becki Chan's zigzag career path has danced across many of our Designers of the Year categories. She has a bachelor of arts in sculpture from the University of Calgary and she also studied architecture at the University of British Columbia. For 15 years, her work involved large public art exhibitions, interior projects and brand activations. I loved every single project, but part of me was missing the hands-on work, says Chan. Often, her designs went from sketch to computer to fabricatorbut she really missed being a maker.
Chan was grinding it out in Toronto, mostly on commercial projects, and doing a little retail therapy to keep herself sane (Some people do yoga, I shopped, she laughs) when she came across a jewellery workshop at a local store. And just like that, she started to connect the dots. Her background in sculpture gave her experience in welding and wax casting, and shed made plenty of small-scale conceptual models in architectural school. She was a natural.
The Rift collection challenges the very definition of the word ring.”
Rift collection.
After taking every class the store offered, Chan moved back to Vancouver and opened her own studio. Perhaps surprisingly, it was her years of working on large projects that actually informed the design of her tiniest pieces.
Her Facet collection, for example, was inspired by the shapes and forms of building facades, with rough, tactile edges meant to catch the light in the same way an angular building does. In the Basin collection, a gemstone is held tightly by cylindrical metal that is open on either sidelike a water basin one might find in a church. Usually, we kind of hide gemstones in the way we frame them, says Chan. This is a peek into how deep and how beautiful the stone is.
Church water basins were Chan's inspiration for the Basin collection.
In the Basin collection, the gemstone is set in a thick bezel seat with an opening on each side to reveal the depth and the cut of the gemstone, explains Chan.
The textured form of Chan's Facet ring is both bold and restrained.
Judge Satu Maaranen, head designer of ready-to-wear, bags and accessories at Marimekko, called Chan's work timeless and modern, while judge Gaby Bayona of Truvelle applauded how wearable the pieces are. Chan's architecturally sensitive design eye is not lost on her clients, many of whom are interior designers and architects themselves.
But she has a lighthearted take on her work, too: she compares her jewellery design to playing with Lego. We have to agreeIt's simple geometry assembled with innovation, and a lot of heart.
Designer Becki Chan.
Are you over 18 years of age?