
Jewelry Production Assistant Intern
Mason and Books, an award-winning fine jewelry brand founded by accessory industry veteran Jamie Books, is seeking a part-time Production Assistant Intern in NYC for a 3-6 month paid internship. Interns would work 20-30 hours per week for $10/hour plus travel/food reimbursement. This role is suitable for fashion, business, production students or recent graduates interested in gaining hands-on experience with fine jewelry, fashion, or accessories.
Special Requirements:
- Tri-State Area – Available to come to NYC Diamond District
- Availability of 3 days minimum per week
- Excellent communication skills, both verbal and written
- Proficient in website building/updating on Squarespace
- Skilled in Photoshop for collection layouts, mock-ups, image editing, etc.
- Familiar with Brandboom for managing stock
- We appreciate if interns show a genuine interest in crafting, producing, manufacturing, developing fine jewelry, which requires a particular level of accuracy and attention to detail.
This is a great opportunity for up-and-coming NYC fashionistas who want to gain some hands-on experience with accessory industry veteran Jamie Books. Interns will get to work side-by-side with Books, witnessing and directly assisting in the jewelry production process. By working alongside talented artisans and craftsmen, interns will navigate NYC’s Diamond District right beside Times Square.
Responsibilities:
Some of the things you'll be working across and helping with support on include:
- Creating + updating cut tickets, production sheets, stock sheets, etc.
- Sourcing + purchasing gems, diamonds, gold in the Diamond District
- Sorting + organizing sourced resources into cut tickets
- Liaising with suppliers, vendors, sample rooms and makers on back + forth details with development, sampling, pre-production and manufacturing processes
- Inventory management of completed pieces, gems, diamonds, gold chains, etc.
- Managing many clients and events at the same time, keeping track of all jewelry pieces