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John Hardy Brooch

John Hardy Estate Bamboo Brooch Pin Sterling Silver
By John Hardy
Located in Brooklyn, NY
John Hardy Estate Bamboo Brooch Pin Sterling Silver JH101 TRUSTED SELLER SINCE 2002 PLEASE SEE
Category

1990s American Brooches

Materials

Silver

John Hardy Estate Butterfly + Bamboo Brooch Rhodium Plated
By John Hardy
Located in Brooklyn, NY
John Hardy Estate Butterfly + Bamboo Brooch & Scarf Clip Rhodium Plated JH1 TRUSTED SELLER SINCE
Category

1990s American Brooches

Materials

Rhodium

John Hardy Estate Ladies Butterfly Brooch & Scarf Clip Rhodium Plated
By John Hardy
Located in Brooklyn, NY
John Hardy Estate Ladies Butterfly Brooch & Scarf Clip Rhodium Plated JH8 TRUSTED SELLER SINCE
Category

1990s American Brooches

Materials

Rhodium

Recent Sales

John Hardy Dot Collection Two-Tone Pendant Set of Three
Located in Scottsdale, AZ
Designer: John Hardy Collection: Dot Collection Material: sterling silver and 18k yellow gold
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Brooches

John Hardy Estate Dragon Brooch Pin Sterling Silver
By John Hardy
Located in Brooklyn, NY
John Hardy Estate Dragon Brooch Pin Sterling Silver JH34 TRUSTED SELLER SINCE 2002 PLEASE SEE OUR
Category

1990s American Brooches

Materials

Sterling Silver

Early John Hardy Sterling Silver Sunflower Brooch
By John Hardy
Located in Miami Beach, FL
Striking three dimensional John Hardy Sunflower brooch. Marked 925 and early JH mark.
Category

20th Century Brooches

Materials

Silver, Sterling Silver

John Hardy Dot Collection Sterling Silver Scarf Pin
By John Hardy
Located in Scottsdale, AZ
This is an awesome way to accessorize! This is a John Hardy dot collection scarf pin. The pin is
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Brooches

Materials

Stainless Steel

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John Hardy for sale on 1stDibs

After John Hardy left his home country of Canada to travel the world, he settled down in Bali, Indonesia, and became one of the world’s most-lauded designers of bracelets, necklaces, rings and other jewelry.

Hardy had studied at the Ontario College of Art & Design in Toronto before he set out globetrotting. In Indonesia, he became so smitten with the people, culture and landscape that he decided to stay, and in 1975 he started selling artisan jewelry and eventually designing his own pieces through his studies of local silversmithing. From the start, the focus was on time-honored jewelry-making traditions and details of craftsmanship.

In 1983, Hardy met an American named Cynthia Boesk who also had a small jewelry business. After they married, they merged their businesses and officially started John Hardy, making a name for themselves designing elegant and eclectic bracelets that reflected centuries-old Balinese techniques. In 1998, Italian-born French jewelry designer Guy Bedarida became the creative director of the company, staying on for 16 years and leading the brand in innovative new directions. Its Bamboo collection, with designs reminiscent of bamboo stalks, directs its sales toward planting bamboo seedlings in Indonesia, while the Kali collection takes its design cues from the distinctive pebbles found in Bali.

After learning about the harmful effects that silver mining has on the environment, Hardy became extremely committed to sustainable luxury business practices, promising that every piece is conflict-free and ethically produced during each step of the design process.

In 2017, the brand was among the jewelers challenged by Vogue Italia to craft pieces from the tagua nut in lieu of using elephant ivory and has used recycled sterling silver in its designs. Its first diamond-centered collection in 2019 concentrated on ethical sourcing and mines where workers are paid fairly. Although Hardy sold his business in 2007, it continues to operate with his name and adhere to the artisanal practices he promoted, including under jewelry designer Hollie Bonneville Barden, who served as creative director from 2016 to 2020. Along with online and global retail sales, the John Hardy Workshop and flagship Kapal Bamboo Boutique in Bali also offer the brand’s enduring designs from an open-air sustainable bamboo building.

Find a collection of John Hardy earrings, cuff bracelets and other jewelry on 1stDibs.

Finding the Right Brooches for You

Vintage brooches, which refer to decorative jewelry traditionally pinned to garments and used to fasten pieces of clothing together where needed, have seen increasing popularity in recent years.

While jewelry trends come and go, brooches are indeed back on the radar thanks to fashion houses like GucciVersaceDior and Saint Laurent, all of which feature fun pinnable designs in their current collections. Whether a dazzlingly naturalistic Art Nouveau dragonfly, a whimsical David Webb animal, a gem-studded bloom or a streamlined abstract design, these jewels add color and sparkle to your look and a spring to your step. 

Given their long history, brooches have expectedly taken on a variety of different shapes and forms over time, with jewelers turning to assorted methods of ornamentation for these accessories, including enameling and the integration of pearls and gemstones. Cameo brooches that originated during the Victorian age are characterized by a shell carved in raised relief that feature portraits of a woman’s profile, while 19th-century micromosaic brooches, comprising innumerable individually placed glass fragments, sometimes feature miniature depictions of a pastoral scene in daily Roman life.

At one time, brooches were symbols of wealth, made primarily from the finest metals and showcasing exquisite precious gemstones. Today, these jewels are inclusive and universal, and you don’t have to travel very far to find an admirer of brooches. They can be richly geometric in form, such as the ornate diamond pins dating from the Art Deco era, or designer-specific, such as the celebrated naturalistic works created by Tiffany & Co., the milk glass and gold confections crafted by Trifari or handmade vintage Chanel brooches of silk or laminated sheer fabric. Chanel, of course, has never abandoned this style, producing gorgeously baroque CC examples since the 1980s.

Brooches are versatile and adaptable. These decorative accessories can be worn in your hair, on hats, scarves and on the lower point of V-neck clothing. Pin a dazzling brooch to the lapel of your blazer-and-tee combo or add a cluster of smaller pins to your overcoat. And while brooches have their place in “mourning jewelry,” in that a mourning brooch is representative of your connection to a lost loved one, they’re widely seen as romantic and symbolic of love, so much so that a hardcore brooch enthusiast might advocate for brooches to be worn over the heart.

Today, find a wide variety of antique and vintage brooches for sale on 1stDibs, including gold brooches, sapphire brooches and more.