Today we’re introducing Beaumont Jewelry Collective, a rising online jewelry store whose dedication to ethical jewelry and charitable giving makes them one to know right away.
Beaumont Jewelry Collective is a family-run business founded by mother-daughter duo Laura and Chloe Beaumont. They focus on artisanal fine jewelry by independent designers who value ethical manufacturing and sustainable sourcing in their own work, each in meaningful, tangible ways.
A whole store full of beautiful, ethical, independent designer jewelry where you can feel good about every single purchase? Yes, please.
This isn’t vague greenwashing. Beaumont Jewelry Collective proves their commitment to ethical jewelry by showing how the designers they feature protect and support the Earth. They also donate a percentage of each sale to organizations that uplift mining communities and safeguard the environment.
With a degree in Marine Biodiversity and Conservation from Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Morgan even worked with leading deep-sea and polar researchers to study the effects of marine diamond mining.
Dylann Wolfe is known for their wave-inspired stacking rings, shown here – look at those colors and how perfectly the rings fit together! I loved wearing them all at once.
In the designer’s own words, Dylann Wolfe is “Born of the sea and called to protect it, every Dylann Wolfe design is traceable, transparent, and tied to conservation.”
As a certified Fairmined Licensee, Dylann Wolfe guarantees full physical traceability of the gold they use, ensuring it meets the strict standards set by the Fairmined system from mine to final piece.
She believes jewelry is more than adornment; it is a companion, a guide, a symbol of empowerment meant to be worn as a personal treasure. Just as dance tells a story through movement, her jewelry tells a story through layers, symbols, and the play of light and texture.
This storytelling spirit shines in Delphine’s designs, especially in the Boheme collection of interchangeable open-ended chains, charms, and “clicker” rings that feature charm holders and connectors.
Delphine Leymarie is strongly committed to responsible gold sourcing. She is Fairmined Certified and uses recycled gold for castings, reducing environmental impact and helping build a more sustainable future by giving new life to already mined gold.
As co-founder of the Reciprocity Jewels project, Delphine also helped start a mine-to-market initiative with Peruvian women artisanal miners who extract gold using mercury-free methods and practice reforestation in the Madre de Dios region of the Amazon.
They also love creating new designs using their clients’ unused, already-owned jewelry.
I especially love WEND’s striking diamond solitaire pendants: the bold reverse-set diamond Rebelheart pendant (top right above) features an SCS-certified lab-grown diamond, but they also offer a stunning rose-cut version with an antique rose cut diamond.
WEND is particularly known for their Astral Peaks collection, a series featuring a wild mountain landscape motif with lab-grown diamond stars that evoke a glittering night sky in the wilderness.
Fun fact: WEND founder Wendy Woldenberg was a high school teacher for 22 years and taught more than 6,000 students to make jewelry by hand. It was the breathtaking scenery of a backpacking trip on the Wonderland Trail around Mount Rainier that inspired her to launch her own nature-inspired collection.
It was the start of a jewelry career shaped by craftsmanship, curiosity, and artistry.
Living in the Pacific Northwest, Kathe draws inspiration from the natural world, from rivers to forests, and honors this bond through her dedication to responsible sourcing. Every material she uses is chosen with care and respect for the Earth, its resources, and the cultural wisdom she has encountered throughout her life.
The Kathe Mai pieces I photographed for this article feature luminous Cortez Pearls. These oceanic gems are saltwater cultured pearls from the rainbow-lipped Pteria sterna oyster, native to Mexico’s Sea of Cortez. Only 4,000 pearls are cultured there once per year, making them the rarest of cultured pearls – and they’re never treated, so that ethereal color is 100% natural.
This will be a two-part series, so keep an eye out for a feature on five more Beaumont Jewelry Collective designers soon (or go ahead and check them out now right here)!
The jewelry featured in this post is available from Beaumont Jewelry Collective. Visit their online store here, or follow them on Instagram here, and don’t forget you can get 10% off by signing up for their mailing list.
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