Wednesday, 1 February 2012

Grab A Real Gem Of A Deal From Jewellery Shops UK

By Adrian Jones


Jewellery Shops UK Set The Global Standard

Jewellery shops UK wide frequently offer gemstones by jewellery designers which tell stories about the heritage and memories of a place. Many collections are well-known for depicting Orkney's rich customs from its Nordic past.

An Orkney writer created a amazing treasury of stories about his native islands. He wove words to paint a picture of life here, the majority of it based in the Viking Age and recent past. Like local creative designers with their pieces for jewellery shops UK, the poet George Mackay Brown, known in the area as GMB, strove to pass on the heart and soul of the place.

For many individuals GMB still epitomises the mindset of Orkney Fifteen years after his death. He'd have celebrated his 90th birthday this week. His influence is keenly felt in his home town of Stromness which continues to bring in many pilgrims from the far corners of the world; eager to enjoy the Hamnavoe (Stromness) of his newspaper columns, poems, stories and plays.

He is without doubt one of Orkney's icons. He captured the spirit of Orkney, writing in an eloquent way which resonates with visitors and locals alike. His work is one of the numerous draws to Orkney and his literary heritage continues today.

Jewellery Shops UK Sell This Legacy

One of the ways this legacy persists is through the GMB Fellowship which was formed in 2006 to encourage new imaginative writing in the islands and to celebrate Orkney writers, past and present. So, Orkney's heritage is widely known through the literature of George McKay Brown and the jewelry of local designers. And GMB's books continue to be sought after with numerous people seeing the islands through the poet's eyes. His work is sold every single day in the summer at Stromness Books and Prints.

GMB's former small apartment in Mayburn Court with its blue plaque displaying his name lies empty, but is still a mecca for the fans who gaze up at the window from where he watched the people of his world go by in the street. His work was performed in 2011: his friend the composer Sir Peter Maxwell Davies' incidental music to The Well at St Magnus Festival and the late playwright Alan Plater's adaptation of the novel Greenvoe. Now Orkney based writer Duncan McLean is adapting the Booker shortlisted novel Beside the Ocean of Time for the National Theatre of Scotland.

And in the Saltire Society's book awards. Maggie Fergusson's "GMB The Life" won Scottish First Book of the Year in 2006; Simon Hall's "The History of Orkney Literature" was joint winner of the same title last year and Ron Ferguson's "George Mackay Brown: The Wound and the Gift" is nominated for the upcoming Scottish Book of the Year.

Poets, jewellery designers and jewellery shops UK wide all love to mark a rich heritage through the creative process.




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