Return to Virginia Business - June 2002

A pearl of a deal


Pearl retailer Hiroko Ikeda has family ties in Japan and that gives her a definite advantage over the competition. Japan, of course, is famous for pearls and pearl divers, but since 1994 its pearl stocks have been plagued by a disease that attacks oysters, depleting the finest Akoya pearls. Pearl dealers worldwide have suffered, but Ikeda, who runs Shinju Pearl in Fairfax, has a lucky uncle. He owns a pearl farm back in Japan and "maintains such a large reserve that my supply of pearls has not been affected by the shortage affecting other dealers," Ikeda says.

The uncle's cheaper, too. Ikeda can sell her pearls at about 40 percent below the retail price. She got her start in the pearl business about 20 years ago as a wholesaler to retail chains such as Saks Fifth Avenue and Woodward & Lothrop. Individual stores promoted her appearances at trunk shows, and Ikeda consulted with customers on quality and stringing.

As buying practices changed, so did Ikeda. "The business set-up changed," she says. "You had to go rent a space instead of them buying from you." Armed with her connoisseur's eye and industry connections, Ikeda launched her own retail showroom, Shinju Pearl. "When I came to the United States, I always had a dream to start my own business, but as a minority and a female it was difficult."

Ikeda is known as one of the top pearl people in the Washington area, says Martin Fuller, a Master Gemologist Appraiser with Fuller and Associates. Fuller works with Ikeda on issues such as insurance and donation appraisals. "She's the only person I refer my clients to," he says.

After 20 years in the Washington, D.C., area, Shinju Pearl is planning an expansion to the West Coast. Ikeda's daughter currently manages a small office in Venice Beach, Calif., where Shinju Pearl has plans for a small showroom.

- Nicole McMullin

Return to Virginia Business - June 2002