De Beers presents AUEA with Leopard jewel-tool boxes to help young talent
AUEA, which provides academic and technical education for 13 to 19-year-olds in the Birmingham area, will be opening its new jewellery skills training centre, the Goldsmiths’ Institute, in September 2024

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Aston University Engineering Academy (AUEA) has been presented with the first set of Leopard jewel-tool boxes, sponsored by De Beers, to encourage young talent into the jewellery industry.
The Leopards initiative was founded in 2016 to preserve the skills and craftsmanship of the British jewellery industry and mentor young people into the industry who are critical to its future.
The boxes, which contain equipment and tools necessary to create a piece of jewellery, were hand delivered by three of the founding members of The Leopards, jewellery designers Theo Fennell and Stephen Webster and leading authority on jewellery and gemstones, Carol Woolton.
AUEA, which provides academic and technical education for 13 to 19 year olds in the Birmingham area, will be opening its new jewellery skills training centre, the Goldsmiths’ Institute, in September 2024.
Funded by a £500,000 Goldsmiths’ Company Charity grant, plus match funding, the institute will be based in the academy’s new vocational skills building and will further boost Birmingham’s “reputation as a centre for jewellery and metalworking”.
Fennell said: “The aim is to shine a light on jewellery making, to nurture young talent into the industry and to reach young people in secondary education around the UK, who otherwise wouldn’t have access to jewellery as a career.
“It will be a way to encourage confidence, self-satisfaction and the pure fun to be found in the joy of working with hands. Design is one area of expertise, but The Leopards also want to encourage the ‘Made by Hand’ ethos as an achievement to be celebrated.”
Carol Woolton added: “Working closely with the Goldsmiths’ Institute, the toolbox will be placed in schools where applied arts education funding is low, where the boxes will be available for experimentation.
“Phase two of the project will be to raise funds for internships, apprenticeships or placements for students interested in furthering their jewellery education. By the end of 2024 The Leopards aim to have at least 50 working boxes placed in schools with the appropriate department’s curriculum approved. We and our friends will visit these schools to talk and encourage young people into the world of jewellery.”
Daniel Locke-Wheaton, principal of Aston University Engineering Academy, concluded:“I am very proud that AUEA has been chosen as the first recipient of a set of Leopard’s jewel-tool boxes.
“These toolboxes are going to provide the expansion and opportunity to gain first-hand, practical skills in jewellery-making, not only benefitting AUEA students, which will also be available to primary and secondary school pupils across the region as part of our outreach projects.”