InBloom Jewelry — a custom fine jewelry studio based in Frederick, Maryland led by Stacey Krantz — has completed and installed its largest design to date. The project involves a kinetic sculpture named 'Belonging,' which was commissioned by the Rotary Club of Carroll Creek for display at Carroll Creek Linear Park.
InBloom Jewelry's Belonging sculpture draws its conceptual framework from the seven guiding pillars of Rotary International. Its design translates abstract values such as service, compassion, and human connection into a moving visual experience. Doug Fauth of Carriage Hill Cabinets physically constructed the piece to ensure precision and structural integrity. The nature of the sculpture changes depending on light, wind, and the viewer's angle.
InBloom Jewelry's Belonging kinetic sculpture represents a significant departure from the studio from exquisitely crafted personal adornments to public art.
Kinetic Jewelry-Inspired Sculptures
InBloom Jewelry Introduces the 'Belonging' Sculpture
Trend Themes
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Jewelry-inspired Public Art — Blends intimate craftsmanship with large-scale installations that enable personal-adornment aesthetics to inform civic landmark design and audience engagement.
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Kinetic Sculptural Design — The fusion of motion, light, and viewer perspective creates dynamic experiences that shift meaning and form in response to environment and time.
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Values-driven Design Translation — Emerging practices that convert abstract organizational or social values into tangible, interpretable visual motifs and spatial narratives for public consumption.
Industry Implications
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Public Art and Urban Placemaking — Opportunities arise for commissioners and designers to integrate responsive sculptural elements that elevate community identity and drive increased visitation.
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Fine Jewelry and Artisan Studios — Craft workshops can expand into large-format fabrication, leveraging precision metalworking and bespoke design languages to access public and commercial commissions.
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Architectural Fabrication and Engineering — Structural engineering and fabrication firms can develop modular kinetic systems and durable material solutions that enable safe, maintainable moving installations.