Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat Rose Gold, White Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator strap, 18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary
2010s British Wrist Watches
Rose Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat Rose Gold, White Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator strap, 18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary
Rose Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat White Gold, Orange Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
/Bracelet :Rubber strap, 18 karat white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat White Gold, Yellow Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
/Bracelet :Rubber strap, 18 karat white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Gold
Fabergé Flirt Black and 18 Karat Rose Gold Watch, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
Buckle :18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary worldwide
Rose Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat White Gold, Enamel Blue Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary worldwide delivery
Diamond, White Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat White Gold, Enamel Green Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary worldwide delivery - Fully
Diamond, White Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat White Gold, Enamel Red Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary worldwide delivery
Diamond, White Gold
Fabergé Flirt 18 Karat Rose Gold, White and Pink Dial, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator strap Buckle :18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Diamond, Rose Gold
Fabergé Flirt Blue 18 Karat Rose Gold and Sapphire Watch, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator or rubber strap, 18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
Rose Gold
Unavailable
Fabergé Altruist Black, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator strap Buckle :18 karat white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Gold
Fabergé Altruist 18 Karat White Gold, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
/Bracelet :Alligator strap 18kt white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Gold
Fabergé Altruist 18 Karat Rose Gold, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
the shape of an Egg) Strap/Bracelet :Alligator strap 18kt rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary
Rose Gold
Fabergé Compliquée Peacock 18 Karat White Gold Black, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
:Alligator strap Buckle :18 karat white gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping
White Gold
Fabergé Lady Levity 18 Karat Rose Gold, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
Fabergé Moon and Sun hands Strap/Bracelet :Alligar strap 18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle
Rose Gold
Fabergé Lady Levity, Year of the Rooster, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
strap Buckle :18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary
Rose Gold
Fabergé Compliquée Black 18 Karat Rose Gold Peacock Watch, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
-applied silver and black lacquer Strap/Bracelet :Alligator strap Buckle :18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin
Rose Gold
Fabergé Lady Levity 18 Karat Rose Gold with Pig Surprise, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
Buckle :18 karat rose gold Fabergé pin buckle Complimentary: - Gift wrapping - Complimentary worldwide
Rose Gold
Fabergé Visionnaire DTZ 18 Karat White Gold and Sapphire Men's Watch, US Clients
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
steel with TC1 luminescent coating Strap/Bracelet :Alligator strap, 18kt rose gold Fabergé pin buckle
Rose Gold
Unavailable
H 2.8 in Dm 0.79 in
Antique Rare Imperial Russian Fabergé 14k Gold, Enamel, and Diamonds, Pin Brooch
By Karl Fabergé
Located in Houston, TX
The pin has an amazing hand painted polichrome enamel miniature depicting a noble lasy, decorated
Diamond, 14k Gold, Enamel
CARL FABERGE Rose Gold Moss Agate Brooch
By Fabergé
Located in Chicago, IL
An impressive moss agate brooch / pin by Carl Faberge. The brooch was made at the workshop of
CARL FABERGE Imperial Presentation Stick Pin
Located in Chicago, IL
An exceptionally rare Russian Tsarist presentation stick pin with the cipher of the Hermitage. Such
Fabergé Gold Pin, circa 1910 with two-Ruble Gold Coin, 1758
By Fabergé
Located in Berlin, DE
Beautiful Fabergè pin, Russia, St. Petersburg, ca. 1910. Needle 14 carats gold, Two-Ruble Gold Coin
14k Gold, 22k Gold, Gold
Antique Fabergé 14K Gold Opal and Diamond Stick Pin 1899–1905
By Fabergé
Located in New York, NY
with this Antique Fabergé 14K Gold Stick Pin, exquisitely fashioned between 1899 and 1905. Bearing the
Diamond, Opal, Gold, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
Art Nouveau Faberge Russian Sapphire Brooch Box 56 Hallmark Gold, 1900
By Fabergé
Located in Herzelia, Tel Aviv
Russian Faberge Sapphire Floral Brooch Pin in Original Box. An extremely rare example of the famous
Sapphire, Gold
Faberge Raspberry Red Enamel Gold Snake and Miniature Egg Stick Pin Brooch
By Fabergé
Located in London, GB
A Fabergé yellow gold stick pin with coiled snake motif surmount, the serpent's mouth suspending a
Yellow Gold
Fabergé August Holmström Antique Carved Moonstone Gold Acorn Hat Pin
By Fabergé
Located in Redmond, WA
A Fabergé diamond-set gold and carved moonstone hat pin, workmaster August Hollming, ST Petersburg
Diamond, 14k Gold, Silver
Rare Antique Fabergé Diamond Sapphire Gold Imperial Tie-Stick Pin Original Case
By Fabergé
Located in Redmond, WA
A rare Fabergé diamond- and sapphire-set gold Imperial presentation tie or stick pin in original
Diamond, Blue Sapphire, 14k Gold
While the House of Fabergé is best known for creating the lavishly ornate and intricately devised Imperial Easter eggs given by the last czars to their families as annual holiday gifts, it was the most prestigious Russian luxury goods maker of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Serving the aristocracy and the well-to-do through stores in St. Petersburg, Moscow and as far afield as London, Fabergé crafted a wide range of brooches and other jewelry, clock cases, silver and myriad objets de vertu that included picture frames, cigarette cases, cufflinks and carved hardstone floral and animal figurines. Following the revolution, the firm was closed by the Soviet state in 1918.
Master goldsmith Gustav Fabergé, a descendant of Huguenot emigrées, founded the company in St. Petersburg in 1842. The firm did a brisk trade among the lesser nobility and the merchant class, but it flourished under the guidance of Gustav’s eldest son Peter Carl Fabergé — known also as Karl Gustavovich Fabergé — who took over in 1872.
Cosmopolitan, widely-traveled and himself a master goldsmith — he was sent on a Grand Tour in the 1860s — the younger Fabergé drew early design inspiration when he volunteered to catalogue and restore pieces in the imperial jewelry collection in the Hermitage.
Fabergé pieces based on historical jewelry from the Hermitage caught the attention of Czar Alexander III at a Moscow exhibition in 1882, and three years later he commissioned the first Imperial Easter egg as a gift for the czarina. Czar Nicholas II continued the tradition, presenting two eggs each Easter — one for his wife and one for his mother.
Relatively simple in design compared to the complex cloisonné-adorned eggs that followed, the first Fabergé egg was a white-enameled ovoid containing a gold “yolk” that held a gold hen, which in turn contained a replica of the imperial crown from which hung an egg-shaped ruby pendant.
As the appointed goldsmith to the royal court, the House of Fabergé became the darling of Russian aristocrats as well as wealthy patrons across Europe. Many and varied objets — hundreds of thousands by one count — were made to meet their demand. The firm employed some 500 craftsmen and designers when it was shuttered.
After the Russian Revolution, the Fabergé name and trademark endured a checkered passage through the 20th century.
Family members left their homeland in 1918 and set up a new business in Paris that was mainly concerned with repairing and restoring earlier-made wares. The name was adopted by an American fragrance and beauty products maker in the late 1930s, and later authorized by the family in a 1951 agreement. The trademark has been subsequently sold several times, and attached to numerous products including jewelry.
Fabergé pieces are richly redolent of a romantic past, and a source of thorough delight — for connoisseurs, true Fabergé refers to items made in the firm’s brief, golden decades from 1885 to 1917.
Collectors are advised to make a study of Fabergé works in museum collections such as the Victoria & Albert and the Royal Collection in London to gain an understanding of the quality of genuine goods made by the original firm, and then to purchase only from reputable and reliable dealers, such those at 1stDibs.
Find Fabergé eggs for sale and other objects and vintage jewelry on 1stDibs.
Gold is the feel-good metal, the serotonin of jewelry. Wear vintage and antique gold necklaces, watches, gold bracelets or gold rings and you feel happy, you feel dressed, you feel, well, yourself.
Gold, especially yellow gold, with its rich patina and ancient pedigree going back thousands of years, is the steady standby, the well-mannered metal of choice. Any discussion of this lustrous metal comes down to a basic truth: Gold is elementary, my dear. Gold jewelry that couples the mystique of the metal with superb design and craftsmanship achieves the status of an enduring classic. Many luxury houses have given us some of our most treasured and lasting examples of gold jewelry over the years.
Since its founding, in 1837, Tiffany & Co. has built its reputation on its company jewelry as well as its coterie of boutique designers, which has included Jean Schlumberger, Donald Claflin, Angela Cummings and Elsa Peretti. There are numerous gold Tiffany classics worth citing. Some are accented with gemstones, but all stand out for their design and the workmanship displayed.
For the woman who prefers a minimalist look, the Tiffany & Co. twist bangle (thin, slightly ovoid) is stylishly simple. For Cummings devotees, signature pieces feature hard stone inlay, such as her pairs of gold ear clips inlaid with black jade (a play on the classic Chanel black and tan), or bangles whose design recalls ocean waves, with undulating lines of lapis lazuli and mother-of-pearl. And just about any design by the great Jean Schlumberger is by definition a classic.
Even had he eschewed stones and diamonds, Southern-born David Webb would be hailed for the vast arsenal of heavy gold jewelry he designed. Gold, usually hammered or textured in some manner, defines great David Webb jewelry. The self-taught jeweler made very au courant pieces while drawing inspiration from ancient and out-of-the-way sources — East meets West in the commanding gold necklaces made by Webb in the early 1970s. The same could be said for his endlessly varied gold cuffs.
In Europe, many houses have given us gold jewelry that sets the highest standard for excellence, pieces that were highly sought after when they were made and continue to be so.
Numerous designs from Cartier are homages to gold. There are the classic Trinity rings, necklaces and bracelets — trifectas of yellow, white and rose gold. As a testament to the power of love, consider the endurance of the Cartier Love bracelet.
Aldo Cipullo, Cartier’s top in-house designer from the late 1960s into the early ’70s, made history in 1969 with the Love bracelet. Cipullo frequently said that the Love bracelet was born of a sleepless night contemplating a love affair gone wrong and his realization that “the only remnants he possessed of the romance were memories.” He distilled the urge to keep a loved one close into a slim 18-karat gold bangle.
BVLGARI and its coin jewelry, gemme nummarie, hit the jackpot when the line launched in the 1960s. The line has been perennially popular. BVLGARI coin jewelry features ancient Greek and Roman coins embedded in striking gold mounts, usually hung on thick link necklaces of varying lengths. In the 1970s, BVLGARI introduced the Tubogas line, most often made in yellow gold. The Tubogas watches are classics, and then there is the Serpenti, the house's outstanding snake-themed watches and bracelets.
A collection called Monete that incorporated the gold coins is one of several iconic BVLGARI lines that debuted in the 1970s and ’80s, catering to a new generation of empowered women. Just as designers like Halston and Yves Saint Laurent were popularizing fuss-free ready-to-wear fashion for women on the go, BVLGARI offered jewels to be lived in.
Since Van Cleef & Arpels opened its Place Vendôme doors in 1906, collection after collection of jewelry classics have enchanted the public. As predominantly expressed in a honeycomb of gold, there is the Ludo watch and accessories, circa the 1920s, and the golden Zip necklace, 1951, whose ingenious transformation of the traditional zipper was originally proposed by the Duchess of Windsor. Van Cleef's Alhambra, with its Moroccan motif, was introduced in 1968 and from the start its popularity pivoted on royalty and celebrity status. It remains one of VCA’s most popular and collected styles.
Mention must be made of Buccellati, whose name is synonymous with gold so finely spun that it suggests tapestry. The house’s many gold bracelets, typically embellished with a few or many diamonds, signified taste and distinction and are always in favor on the secondary market. Other important mid-20th-century houses known for their gold-themed jewelry include Hermès and Ilias Lalaounis.
Find a stunning collection of vintage and antique gold jewelry on 1stDibs.
Emblems of heartfelt emotion, elegant vessels for photos and keepsakes and perfect for layering, these special ornaments are an essential component of any thoughtfully curated jewelry collection.
From vibrant to subtle, elegant to cheeky, enamel jewelry encompasses a wide range of colors and styles, and there are almost as many techniques for creating these distinctive pieces.