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  • Money where his mouth is

    Boston Herald , MA
    June 21 2009

    Money where his mouth is

    Jeweler to celebs makes grill for Celtics star Kendrick Perkins

    By Carley Thornell
    Sunday, June 21, 2009

    Chillin' and grilling for the average Joe means a backyard bash and a
    few brewskis. For Celtics [team stats] center Kendrick Perkins [stats]
    it involves a smile brimming with diamonds, the bejeweled mouthpiece
    of the elite rap and sports set.

    That the Celtics center recently spent thousands on oral bling is no
    surprise to jeweler Richard Berberian of Reading, who has dozens
    celebrity clients on his roster.

    `If they win, I win,' Berberian said of Boston's players and `playas.'

    More surprising is the unpretentious locale of Berberian's business,
    Elyse Jewelers: an unassuming spot on Main Street in Reading, neatly
    set back from gas stations, an insurance company and a garden center.

    `Geographically, it's the apex of everything around here - Boston, the
    Mass Pike, New Hampshire. It's private, it's safe, it's easy to
    park. It works really well for celebrities and athletes,' Berberian
    said. `A lot of people come in and see the type of jewelry I carry and
    say, `It doesn't look like Reading.' That's because my market, for the
    most part, isn't.'

    A glance at his star-studded walls tells you that the glitterati leave
    with shining grins, designs combining geometric shapes and stones. His
    accessories have adorned Channel 7's Victoria Block, Mario Lopez and
    Shelley Hennig of `Days of Our Lives.'

    Berberian just wrapped up a season accessorizing `Superstars of Dance'
    hosts Michael Flatley and Methuen's own former Miss USA, Susie
    Castillo. He's also enjoyed an `American Idol' hook-up: one of his
    latest pieces, a stunning 113-karat blue topaz pendant necklace, was
    slated for exposure on America's top-rated show - until, for the first
    time in the show's eight-season history, no female contestant made the
    finale.

    `I like working with color, making larger pieces using gemstones that
    are more nontraditional,' said Berberian. `I'm doing a lot of work
    with lesser-priced but striking gems like beryl. I've made some really
    cool pieces out of topaz and quartz - striking gems but not
    over-the-top expensive. I like building more substantial pieces that
    grab your attention.'

    He's captured the eye of Canadian-cum-Boston designer Samuel Vartan,
    with whom he worked for Boston Fashion Week.

    Vartan, who has used the same metal belt designs of Berberian's that
    have adorned the likes of Paris Hilton and supermodel Karolina
    Kurkova, said: `His work really does have a very Mediterranean
    cultural theme to it. Europeans like nice, exorbitant jewelry and his
    is very obviously tastefully done, but it can easily be the other way
    around.'

    Vartan says his spring-summer collection is an `ode to Mediterranean
    cultural living' that includes resortwear influenced by Italy and
    Turkey. Berberian, a seventh-generation jeweler in a family with
    Turkish and Armenian roots, says he particularly likes Italy, where
    he's traveled frequently for business and pleasure, and is inspired by
    architecture.

    There are several affordable pieces in Berberian's My First Gems
    collection, a line ranging from $95 to $2,999 (for one-carat ideal-cut
    diamond studs) geared toward children. But he's quick to note, `It's
    not kiddie jewelry.'

    `It's not necessarily small, either,' he said. `Everything is set in
    gold or platinum; you can wear it your entire life. I've sold as much
    of this to adults as to people' buying for children.

    One versatile three-in-one diamond-pendant design features concentric
    circles that can be worn together or individually with just the
    yellow-gold or diamond circles. Sales of the ideal-cut diamond studs
    have been steady, he said, especially in graduation season, and
    Berberian envisions a long future for them: `Quarter-carat sets might
    be too small for a young woman. But they'd make perfectly matched side
    stones to any engagement ring.'

    And Berberian is feeling the love: Despite the economically driven lag
    in the retail jewelry market, Elyse's bridal business is going
    strong. (He recently ran a Jordan's Furniture-like promotion, where if
    it rained on a couple's wedding day, their rings were free; Jordan's
    offered free furniture if the Red Sox [team stats] won the World
    Series.)

    `I think it's to the point where if it's time for a young couple to
    get engaged, it doesn't matter what the economy's doing. If it's time
    to pull the trigger, you pull the trigger,' he said. `Maybe instead of
    spending $10,000, they're backing off and it's going to be $7,000. But
    all the boomers kids are coming of age. There's a huge crop of kids
    getting engaged and married.'

    http://www.bostonherald.com/news/region al/view/2009_06_21_Money_where_his_mouth_is:_Jewel er_to_celebs_makes_grill_for_Celtics_star_Kendrick _Perkins/srvc=home&position=v4
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