Gucci Link to Love Chain Earring with Gucci Bar YBD662115001
By Gucci
Located in Wilmington, DE
18k yellow gold Bar pendant with 'Gucci' engraving For pierced ears Length: 4.7" YBD662115001
2010s Drop Earrings
18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Gucci Link to Love Chain Earring with Gucci Bar YBD662115001
By Gucci
Located in Wilmington, DE
18k yellow gold Bar pendant with 'Gucci' engraving For pierced ears Length: 4.7" YBD662115001
18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Gucci Link to Love Chain Earring with Diamonds YBD662139001
By Gucci
Located in Wilmington, DE
18k white gold Bar pendant with 'Gucci' engraving Diamonds For pierced ears Length: 4.7" YBD662139001
Diamond
Gucci Blind For Love Silver Heart Stud Earrings
By Gucci
Located in Southampton, PA
The Gucci “Blind For Love” earrings are made of silver and each of the two weighs 2.45 grams.
Silver
Gucci Blind for Love Sterling Silver and Black Spinel Earrings
By Gucci
Located in Southampton, PA
The Gucci “Blind for Love” earrings are made of sterling silver and embellished with black spinels.
Spinel, Sterling Silver
Sold
W 0.36 in L 0.44 in
Gucci Vintage Iconic Logo Trademark Heart Love Pierced Earrings Sterling Silver
By Gucci
Located in Wokingham, England
Gucci Vintage Unisex Iconic Classic Logo Trademark Heart Love Pierced Earrings, Sterling Silver Very good condition.
Sterling Silver
Gucci Sterling Silver Blind for Love Feline Drop Blue Zircon Earrings
By Gucci
Located in Feasterville, PA
The polished finish of the sterling silver creates a captivating contrast, allowing the zircons to shine with unmatched brilliance. One earring is engraved with Gucci's signature fel...
Sterling Silver
GUCCI RAINBOW CRYSTAL LOVED Drop Earrings
By Gucci
Located in Zürich, CH
Gucci Loved drop earrings embellished with multicolour crystals and antique gold-tone hardware.
Gucci Love Britt Pink Stone Silver Drop Hook Earrings
By Gucci
Located in Dubai, Al Qouz 2
Perfectly designed for a statement look, these drop earrings from Gucci flaunt the iconic GG motif in a refreshing style. The pair features pink stone inlays and a silver body. These...
Silver
Long before trend-bucking creative director Alessandro Michele brought his hallucinatory “Utopian Fantasy” campaign to Gucci, it was a modest Italian leather shop. Today, it’s an internationally renowned luxury house with an iconic logo, and vintage Gucci clothing, handbags and shoes are among high fashion's most covetable goods.
Guccio Gucci (1881–1953) admired the stylish suitcases he saw wealthy guests arrive with at the Savoy Hotel in London, where he worked as a bellhop. So, in 1921, after a stint at Franzi, a luggage company in his hometown of Florence, he opened a leather goods shop of his own.
At first, Gucci’s Florence business specialized in equestrian accessories. But as its reputation flourished, particularly among the English aristocracy, so too did its footprint. In 1938, he brought three of his sons — Aldo, Vasco and Rodolfo — into the business and expanded it to Rome and later Milan. In the mid-1930s, a League of Nations embargo against Italy pushed Gucci to experiment with alternatives to imported leather. Its woven hemp fabric from Naples, adorned with the brand’s signature diamond print, was a hit, especially among A-list celebrities. The material was first used on suitcases before finding enduring popularity on handbags. (No list of revered designer purses would be complete without Gucci.)
In the 1950s, Elizabeth Taylor carried one of Gucci’s bamboo-handled tote bags, another adaptation to material rationing. After Jackie Kennedy was seen sporting a slouchy Gucci tote in 1961, it was renamed for the First Lady. Then Grace Kelly, on a visit to the boutique in Milan, inspired Rodolfo Gucci to work with Italian illustrator and Gucci textile designer Vittorio Accornero on the Flora print in 1966. Taking cues from Sandro Botticelli’s Primavera, with its pattern of flora and insects, it was painted entirely by hand and featured no fewer than 37 colors.
In 1953, just 15 days after opening his first store on New York’s 5th Avenue, Guccio passed away at 72. The early 1970s saw store openings in Tokyo and Hong Kong, but by the late 1980s, Gucci was floundering. Rodolfo Gucci took charge in 1982, but family drama and lawsuits ensued. In 1993, Rodolfo’s son, Maurizio, transferred his shares in the company to Investcorp, ending the family’s involvement in Gucci. Dawn Mello, then-president of Bergdorf Goodman, joined as creative director in 1989. But it was Tom Ford, who took over as creative director in 1994, who ultimately revived the brand.
Ford’s racy ads, shot by photographers such as Mario Testino, stirred controversy. And his potent vision of sexed-up femininity — with “jewel-toned satin shirts unbuttoned to there,” as Vogue described his breakthrough 1995 runway show — was wildly successful. The new millennium brought new ownership — Pinault Printemps Redoute in 2004 — and a more toned-down vision from Frida Giannini, who became sole creative director in 2006. Alessandro Michele was named creative director in 2015, and the storied brand took a giant leap forward.
Find vintage Gucci clothing and accessories on 1stDibs.
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.