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David Yurman Starburst Earrings

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David Yurman Diamond Sterling Silver Starburst Earrings
By David Yurman
Located in Philadelphia, PA
back From Starburst collection Signed DY for David Yurman Measures: 5/8 x 5/8 inch Total Weight
Category

20th Century Unknown Modern Stud Earrings

Materials

Diamond, Sterling Silver

David Yurman Diamond Sterling Silver Starburst Earrings
By David Yurman
Located in Philadelphia, PA
back From Starburst collection Signed DY for David Yurman Measures: 5/8 x 5/8 inch Total Weight
Category

20th Century Unknown Modern Stud Earrings

Materials

Diamond, Sterling Silver

David Yurman Starburst Sterling Silver & Diamond Drop Earrings
By David Yurman
Located in Baltimore, MD
David Yurman Starburst Sterling Silver & Diamond Drop Earrings Metal: Sterling silver 925 Weight
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Dangle Earrings

Materials

Diamond, Sterling Silver

David Yurman Starburst Sterling Silver Pave Diamond Stud Earrings
By David Yurman
Located in Mount Kisco, NY
Said to be inspired by designer David Yurman's experience viewing fireworks in the Paris night sky
Category

2010s American Stud Earrings

Materials

Diamond, Sterling Silver

David Yurman Starburst Earrings 18K Yellow Gold with Diamonds Petite
By David Yurman
Located in New York, NY
: Height/Length: 14.00 ", Width: 9 " Designer: David Yurman Model: Starburst Earrings 18K Yellow Gold with
Category

21st Century and Contemporary More Earrings

Materials

Yellow Gold

David Yurman Hampton Blue Topaz Diamond Starburst Earrings
By David Yurman
Located in Gainesville, FL
Authentic David Yurman Sterling Silver Starburst Earrings with Hampton Blue Topaz & Diamonds, 12mm
Category

2010s Unknown Contemporary Stud Earrings

Materials

White Diamond, Topaz, Sterling Silver

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David Yurman for sale on 1stDibs

Perhaps the ultimate artistic couple, sculptor David Yurman (b. 1942) and his wife, painter Sybil Kleinrock (b. 1942), couldn’t have imagined they’d build an internationally renowned fine jewelry empire when they met in 1969 at a sculpture studio in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village.

Eleven years later, in 1980, the duo established the David Yurman brand and it boomed almost instantly, a by-product of the pair’s love for and commitment to making art. (They’ve been known to call their business as well as their relationship “one big art project.”) In fact, Yurman’s most recognizable piece, the Cable bracelet, was inspired by his background in metalworking and direct welding, skills he learned when he was just a teenager. It is a marvelously modern accessory rooted in everything from jewelry motifs of ancient Syria to the natural formations of tree branches that would yield the Cable ring, earrings and other items.

When Long Island, New York–born Yurman was in high school, he spent a summer visiting his sister in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where he met Cuban sculptor Ernesto González, who taught him how to heat and fuse metals. After that fateful summer, Yurman experimented feverishly with bronze sculpture and, eventually, minimalist jewelry design.

Yurman studied briefly at New York University, opting to drop out after a year to hitchhike across the United States, ending up in an artist colony on California’s Big Sur coastline. The bustling artists’ scene in New York during the 1960s eventually drew him back to the East Coast. There, he trained under Cubist sculptor Jacques Lipchitz, and, by 1969, he was a foreman in sculptor Hans Van de Bovenkamp’s Greenwich Village studio. It was in the studio that he met Kleinrock.

Kleinrock and Yurman began a romantic relationship, and he designed her a sculptural welded bronze necklace to wear to an art gallery opening. The gallery owner was so enchanted by the design — Yurman called it the Dante — that she wanted to buy it on the spot. Yurman refused because he considered the gift too personal, but his partner left it with the dealer. Within hours, four necklaces were sold and a brand was born.

A year after the two married in 1979 — the ceremony included simple gold rings Yurman had soldered from gold in his workshop — they officially launched David Yurman. Three years later, one of his most popular designs, the Cable bracelet, hit the market.

Today, David Yurman engagement rings, bracelets, rings, necklaces and earrings are widely treasured, distinctive works of American jewelry design.

Finding the Right earrings for You

In the United States, ear piercing didn’t really become popular until the 1950s and ‘60s, but our desire for a dazzling pair of vintage earrings has deeper roots than that. In fact, wearing earrings actually goes back thousands of years, and you can find many tangible connections between now and then in how we continue to talk about these treasured accessories.

Women wore ornamental earrings — studs and hoops at the very least — in Ancient Egypt, which is home to mines that are among the earliest sources of emeralds in the world. Emerald earrings are highly prized today, and their quality lies in their rich, saturated color. The highest-quality emeralds are green or bluish-green. Earrings worn by the affluent in early Roman civilizations were set with precious stones such as diamonds and pearls, and a clean-looking pop of pearl on the front of the lobe is as timeless as ever. Hoop earrings are imbued with symbolism and cultural significance for many, and on view in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Ancient Near Eastern Art Gallery is a pair of simple gold hoops from Mesopotamia dating to between 2600 and 2500 B.C.

Today, ear piercing is very popular all over the world, and, as a result, it is difficult to overstate how much everyone pines for a good pair of earrings — modernist drop earrings, glamorous Victorian hoops, geometrically complex chandelier earrings, you name it. Sure, jewelry trends and the fashion darlings of social media come and go, but earrings have a staying power that seems impenetrable: The still-strong love affair between British royals and Cartier earrings is more than a century old, glossy 1970s hoops from legacy houses such as Bulgari and Van Cleef & Arpels remain the statement makers they’ve always been and although people have been stacking earrings for many moons, the allure of an expertly mismatched stack of charms and studs still feels fresh and new.

While there is no shortage of modern earring designs to choose from, the classics, like coral earrings, Art Deco–style earrings and diamond drop earrings are still heavy hitters. On 1stDibs, find a wide range of antique, new and vintage earrings today.