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For Future Reference Vintage Fine Jewelry Trunk Show

For Future Reference Vintage Fine Jewelry Trunk Show

If you love vintage jewelry, join us October 8th and 9th for our For Future Reference Vintage Jewelry Trunk Show at our Nashville boutique. It’s the start of our one-year anniversary celebration, and we just want to say thank you for the most incredible first year. Come celebrate with us! 

We’re kicking things off October 8th with a cocktail party from 3–6pm — think fall cocktails, music, and little thank-you gifts just for you. And curated vintage jewelry, of course! Can't make the cocktail party? We will have a match pop-up with ceremony from 11am to 4pm that day too! 

Randi is bringing her incredible vintage eye and Mark will have some amazing timepieces.
For Future Reference (FFR), the New York– and Los Angeles–based showroom/marketing consultancy, has introduced For Future Reference Vintage—comprising unsigned vintage and estate jewelry personally curated by FFR founder Randi Molofsky—to its portfolio of services. 

FFR is well known for its stewardship of independent jewelry brands that have gone on to win awards—and that often end up at the most prestigious retailers. With a keen ability to recognize rising stars, Molofsky and her team have helped such brands as Harwell Godfrey, Retrouvaí, and Buddha Mama ascend in the luxury marketplace.

Now, Molofsky is applying this skill—and her gloriously, inimitably stylish point of view—to create capsules of vintage and estate pieces. She launched FFR Vintage at NYC market in February.

“I’ve been selling vintage and estate jewelry for years and knew there was a customer for these pieces, so I really saw a hole in the market and wanted to fill it,” she says. “Stores understood the idea immediately because there is a tremendous value proposition in unsigned jewelry, and they knew that I have a good sense, stylistically, of what the market is looking for.”

Molofsky’s personal collection of period jewelry and timepieces served as the foundation for this project. In other words, the kinds of eye-catching pieces you wish were hiding inside your grandmother’s jewelry box.