Skip to main content

Delizza & Elster Brooches

3
to
1
3
3
2
13
433
413
392
236
2
1
1
1
2
1
Creator: Delizza & Elster
Topaz Juliana Rhinestone Brooch With Heart Scrolls By DeLizza & Elster, 1960s
By Delizza & Elster
Located in McKinney, TX
- Vintage item - 2.5" x 2.5" - Gold plated - Topaz-colored glass cabochons - Amber-colored glass cabochons - Aurora Borealis crystal rhinestone accents - Heart scroll...
Category

1960s American Modern Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Tara Golden Scarab Cabochon Cluster Clip in Earrings and Pin Brooch
By Delizza & Elster
Located in Milford, DE
A colorful pin brooch and clip-on earring set by Tara, a mid-1900s costume jewelry designer. Each piece features colorful carved resin scarabs prong-set in a gold-tone metal setting....
Category

20th Century Retro Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Gold Plate

Milk Glass & Pink Rhinestone Leaf Brooch By DeLizza & Elster, 1960s
By Delizza & Elster
Located in McKinney, TX
- Vintage item - 3" x 1.75" - Milk glass navette stones with round milk glass and faceted pink crystal rhinestones - Gold plated - By DeLizza...
Category

1960s Unknown Modern Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Related Items
Gold and Opal Galleon Made
Located in London, GB
A gold and opal galleon made by Bentley & Skinner, the galleon in full sail consisting of hull set with boulder opal weighing 21.53 carats and fine gold sa...
Category

2010s British Modern Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Opal, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold

Carved Shell Cameo Signed Portrait of a Classical Beauty Estate Fine Jewelry
Located in Montreal, QC
Beautiful Captivating Hand carved shell Cameo depicting the Profile of a Classical Beauty with long flowing hair enhanced with flowers and a Dove. Artist signed: FUSCO. Unmounted. Re...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Contemporary Delizza & Elster Brooches

Gilt metal, fuschia and amethyst paste brooch/earrings, Christian Dior, c. 1954
By Mitchel Maer for Christian Dior
Located in Greyabbey, County Down
An unusual brooch and earrings from Christian Dior by Mitchel Maer, made of articulated twisted gilt rings of various sizes, highlighted with amethyst, light amethyst and fuschia pas...
Category

1950s British Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Gilt Metal

Beautiful 1950s Large Blue Rhinestone Crystal Silver Tone Vintage 50s Brooch Pin
Located in San Diego, CA
Beautiful 1950s extra large blue rhinestone and crystal silver tone statement brooch pin ! Features lovely iridescent stones that give off the most beautiful shine when hit with ligh...
Category

1950s Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Van Cleef & Arpels Vintage Superb Rose de Noel Diamond Red Coral Gold Suite
By Van Cleef & Arpels
Located in New York, NY
Van Cleef & Arpels Vintage Superb Rose de Noel Diamond Red Coral Gold Suite Since the 1970’s Van Cleef & Arpels has celebrated the Christmas Rose by pre...
Category

1980s French Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Coral, Diamond, 18k Gold

Crown Trifari Vintage 1950s Bouquet Floral Dandelion Leaf Pearl Cluster Brooch
By Alfred Philippe for Trifari
Located in Wokingham, England
Very good condition. 100% Genuine. Very light colour loss or light scratches, barely noticeable. The leaf part is some a little loose, not any problems. A very beautiful brooch, s...
Category

1950s American Art Nouveau Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Gold Plate

Cilea Paris Oversized Turquoise Resin Ribbon Pin Brooch
By Ciléa
Located in Atlanta, GA
This exquisite brooch from Cilea Paris is a piece of art to wear, crafted by hand with skillful attention to detail. Made with high-quality resin, it features a beautiful turquoise r...
Category

Early 2000s French Modern Delizza & Elster Brooches

John Brogden Shell Cameo Brooch and Earrings, English, circa 1870
By John Brogden
Located in London, GB
Antique shell cameo brooch and earrings by John Brogden, English, circa 1870. A yellow gold suite of jewellery, the brooch composed of a horizontally situated oval Bull’s Mouth shell cameo of the Greek goddess Selene riding a serpentine dragon in a rubover collet setting, encircled by a conforming frame of gold beading and twisted gold wire punctuated with four gold palmette form plaques engraved and decorated with dark blue enamel and placed at the cardinal points, the reverse mounted with a hinged pin and scroll clasp, the earrings each composed of a vertical oval Bull’s Mouth shell cameo engraved with a bust length portrait of Selene with crescent-set headdress, encircled by a conforming frame matching that of the brooch with the addition of a pendant decoration composed of a horizontal bar of gold beading and twisted gold wires suspending gold link chains graduated from centre and ending in conical gold elements, the reverses mounted with French wire fittings, all in a fitted red leather case, the interior marked ‘FIRST CLASS PARIS MEDAL/ 1855.1867.1851/ PARIS FIRST CLASS & LONDON PRIZE MEDALS/ JOHN BROGDON/ Goldsmith/ MANUFACTORY/ 16, Henrietta St. Covent Garden/ London’. The cameo—defined as a gem, usually either a mineral or a shell, upon which a design has been carved in relief—is believed to have originated in Hellenistic Greece, during the third century BC. These miniature sculptures, at that time confined to the medium of hardstone, are thought to have been made with the primary purpose of personal adornment. The same practice of mounting cameos in jewellery was then continued by the Ancient Romans, and they are known to have been worn by many a Roman emperor. After the fall of Rome the fashion for cameos went into a decline, until it was again revived during the Renaissance period, brought about by a keen interest in the ancient world. At this time both antique and contemporary cameos were mounted in jewellery, as well as collected as objet d’art. The art of cameo cutting was revived in Italy, where it would remain a centre for the coming centuries. Again there was a lull in interest in carved gemstones, until the Neoclassical revival of the eighteenth century, largely stimulated by the discoveries of the ancient Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. As with the Renaissance, antique specimens were generally prized over modern cameos, and the worldliest men in Europe held them among their collections of art and antiques. That said, carving centres in Rome and Torre del Greco (near Naples) in Italy were established in response to the demand of the Grand Tourists, who travelled to Italy and Greece to become educated in the wonders of the ancient world. It was at this time that shell cameos, mostly made in Torre del Greco due to its proximity to the sea, became more popular, owing to the relative ease in carving shell over hardstone. In addition to Rome, hardstone cameos also became a specialty of Idar Oberstein, Germany, which had a long history with both the gem mining and cutting trade. In a shift away from the collector’s cases of the previous century, the nineteenth century saw a strengthening in the fashion for wearable cameos. After the Empress Josephine donned a cameo-set suite of jewellery at the coronation of Napoleon in 1804, cameo jewellery became all the rage. Napoleon played a further hand in promoting the art by establishing a gemstone carving school in Paris, inspired by his appreciation for the arts of the ancient world. By the mid-nineteenth century shell cameos, in part due to their lightness compared with hardstone cameos, were the height of fashion. Large shell cameos as well as hardstone cameos were set into contemporary mounts, often as suites of jewellery. Some of the best cameos of the nineteenth century—carved by a select group of recognized carvers—were set into revivalist mounts, corresponding to the subject matter. In Victorian England cameo jewellery was particularly prized, due in part to the fact that the Queen owned and wore a number of cameo jewels. One example which can often be seen in official portraits is the Badge of the Order of Victoria and Albert, carved by Tommaso Saulini of Rome, who also produced cameos for the maker of the present suite, John Brogden. To meet demand some carvers set themselves up in London, including William Schmidt, a German carver from Idar Oberstein, who produced cameos for top London jewellers, including Brogden, Carlo Giuliano and Child & Child. In fact, Schmidt purports to have been the first to carve cameos out of opal, which Brogden reportedly displayed in the Paris Exhibition of 1878. An extant example, now in the collection of the British Museum, was set by the Giuliano firm. Regarding subject matter, cameos throughout time have been largely figural, from bust length profile portraits to scenes with multiple full-length figures, and sometimes animals. Ancient Greek and Roman cameos often depicted mythological scenes as well as contemporary figures. During the Renaissance, mythological scenes were popular, often taken directly from ancient sculpture, as well as portraits of notable contemporary figures. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, due to the revivalist styles, both Renaissance and Classical subjects were copied and set into matching (and sometimes unmatching) revivalist mounts. From the Renaissance through the Victorian era, being able to recognize the source of the carving in a cameo was a mark of erudition, revealing in the wearer knowledge of Classical art. As mentioned, the present cameo parure...
Category

1870s English Victorian Antique Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Yellow Gold

Irena Jaworska, Line Vautrin School Resin and Orange Mirror Mosaic Pin Brooch
Located in Atlanta, GA
This adorable Irena Jaworska Talosel or resin pin brooch features a dimensional geometric fan shape in black resin framing, topped with a mosaic of mirr...
Category

1970s French Modernist Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

3.89 Carat Yellow Sapphire and Diamond Van Cleef & Arpels Clip 18 Karat Yellow
By Van Cleef & Arpels
Located in Charleston, SC
Van Cleef & Arpels Clip in 18 Karat Yellow Gold and Platinum. Signed Piece. Holds 3.69 Carats of Yellow Sapphires and 0.20 Carats of Diamonds in the Platinum band that pinches the ...
Category

Mid-20th Century French Modern Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Diamond, Yellow Sapphire, 18k Gold, Platinum

Vintage matte gold blue glass designer runway brooch earrings set
Located in Palos Hills, IL
DETAILS • unsigned • gold tone with glass • vintage designer runway brooch earrings set MEASUREMENTS • brooch is 2" by 1.75", earrings are 1.5" by 1.25" CONDITION • excelle...
Category

20th Century Delizza & Elster Brooches

Cat Brooch Made by Van Cleef & Arpels
By Van Cleef & Arpels
Located in New York, NY
The phenomenal designers at Van Cleef are known to take inspiration from nature in their work, and this piece is no exception. This work of art turned jewelry is a Cat brooch set wit...
Category

1970s American Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Materials

Diamond, Emerald, Onyx

Previously Available Items
Periwinkle Blue Crystal Rhinestone Layered Juliana Brooch By DeLizza & Elster
By Delizza & Elster
Located in McKinney, TX
- Vintage item - 2.5" x 2.25" - Silver tone - Prong set art glass & colored crystal rhinestones - Attributed to DeLizza & Elster - C...
Category

1960s American Modern Vintage Delizza & Elster Brooches

Delizza & Elster brooches for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a range of Delizza & Elster brooches available on 1stDibs. Each of these unique items was designed with extraordinary care, often using gold. We have 3 pieces in this collection as well as a number of other designs by this jeweler. While this collection reflects work that originated over various time periods, most of these items were designed during the 20th century. If you’re looking for additional options, many customers also consider brooches by Trio, BSK, and Vendome. Prices for Delizza & Elster brooches can differ depending upon gemstone, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $269 and tops out at $365, while pieces like these, on average, can sell for $289.

Recently Viewed

View All