Joe Lanning has always been a person who could fix things. He was tired of having to relocate for his retail job, so he headed off in a new direction. Lanning took classes in diamond setting and jewelry repair and launched his own jewelry business. “I like the customers’ reaction when they pick up their jewelry after it’s cleaned and repaired. They get the enjoyment of wearing something that belonged to their parents or grandparents,” he said.
Name: Joe Lanning.
Job/employer: Owner of My Jeweler in downtown Vancouver.
Age: 66.
Working in Clark County, a brief profile of interesting Clark County business owners or a worker in the public, private, or nonprofit sector. Send ideas to Mary Ricks: mary.ricks@columbian.com; fax 360-735-4598; phone 360-735-4550.
Background: After I graduated from high school, I attended community college and worked part time for J.C. Penney in downtown Portland. I had been accepted into the company’s management training program. Then I got my draft notice for the Army. After my discharge, I went back to J.C. Penney for 12 more years and moved around to several cities. A friend was in the jewelry business in Richland, and thought it would be a good business for me, too. In 1980, I completed a diamond-setting course in Portland and learned different techniques of setting stones and doing repair work, wax carving and casting. We moved to Richland, where I did jewelry repair for a couple of years and then moved back to Portland. I started my own business in downtown Vancouver in 1986.
Residence: The Heights.
One word to describe yourself: Quiet.
Most rewarding part of job: I like the customers’ reaction when they pick up their jewelry. Many times, someone will bring in a piece of jewelry, maybe a ring that was their mother’s or grandmother’s, and they want to be able to wear it. After I have cleaned, polished and/or repaired it, they are amazed how it looks compared to what it looked like when they brought it in. It might be a sentimental piece and now they get the enjoyment of wearing something that belonged to their parents or grandparents.