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Verdura Amber

Vintage Mid-Century Original 1970s Givenchy Precious Stone Choker Necklace
By Versace, Givenchy, Chanel, Tiffany & Co.
Located in San Diego, CA
evokes the style of Givenchy created for Hepburn. Beautiful stones juxtaposed in amber and bright blue
Category

Vintage 1970s French Mid-Century Modern Collectible Jewelry

Materials

Crystal, Gold Plate

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Beautiful and intricate jewerly piece by Marc Jacobs. This incredible piece of jewerly is created in brass and crystals. The gold tone juxtaposed with the gray-blue crystals in saf...
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Vintage 1970s Original YSL Faceted Crystal Multi Jeweled Opera Necklace
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Verdura Jade Colored Stone Gold Earclips
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
ridged pads for grip, signed VERDURA, stamped 750 for 18kt gold, measuring approximately 1 3/8 inches
Category

1990s American Clip-on Earrings

Materials

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Verdura Carved Amber and Citrine Shell Ear Clips
By Verdura
Located in Weston, MA
The epitome of casual chic, these Verdura shell-form ear clips are one of the firm’s signature
Category

Late 20th Century Drop Earrings

Materials

Amber, Citrine

VERDURA Agate and Gold Bead Necklace
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
An 18 karat and high karat yellow gold and agate necklace, Verdura. Designed as a strand of
Category

Vintage 1980s American Beaded Necklaces

Materials

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Verdura 18kt Gold & Amber "Spiral Shell" Earclips
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
Lightweight, flattened "spiral shell" earclips, in carved amber (golden honey color), wrapped in
Category

1990s American Clip-on Earrings

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Verdura 18kt Gold & Colored Stone Earclips
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
Each centering a horizontal row of bezel set cabochon stones (amber and rhodolite garnet) within a
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Contemporary Clip-on Earrings

Materials

Amber, Garnet, 18k Gold

VERDURA Citrine "Cross-Over" Earclips
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
The pair of oval faceted citrines colored a warm honey amber, wrapped within a puffed yellow gold
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Clip-on Earrings

Materials

Citrine, 18k Gold

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Verdura for sale on 1stDibs

Fulco di Verdura (1898–1978) is not exactly a household name, except for those who know a thing or two about highly original, often eccentric handcrafted jewelry and, even more so, for those fortunate enough to own some. In that exclusive group, Verdura is regarded as the most gifted and coveted designer of his time.

Verdura was born in Sicily in 1898, the scion of a noble family related to the Lampedusas. (His cousin, Giuseppe di Lampedusa, wrote the great Italian saga The Leopard). His life was charmed from birth. Raised in his family’s villa, he grew up during a time when Sicily, and Palermo in particular, were meccas for well-born and highly cultured European travelers.

A bona fide duke with no clear ambitions but creative leanings aplenty (he could draw and paint), the young Verdura was part of the wandering social circuit — the so-called beau monde — that went from capital to capital, resort to resort.

Verdura, though small in stature, had that indefinable quality called charm. As a result, he was the life of every party he attended. When he finally started designing jewelry under Coco Chanel in the late 1920s, many of his friends became his clients (or received the pieces as gifts). Elsa Maxwell took him under her ample wing when she was hired to do public relations for the Lido in Venice and introduced him to the local and visiting cognoscenti. Chanel, whom he met in Venice, hired him to work in the textiles division of her fashion house. But it was his flair for jewelry that soon caught Coco’s eye. Eventually, he rose to become her personal designer of fine jewelry.

In 2002’s Verdura: The Life and Work of a Master Jeweler (Thames & Hudson), Vanity Fair’s Amy Fine Collins describes the sensation of wearing pieces by Verdura, who drew inspiration from nature for his signature gem-studded seashell brooches and honeybee earrings. “They were ingeniously calculated to flatter the wearer,” writes Collins. “Earrings undulated to complement the convolutions of an earlobe, rings seductively followed the phalanges of a finger, and necklaces gracefully traced the anatomy of the throat.”

In 1934, Verdura left Chanel and together with two friends, aspiring actress Princess Natalia Pavlovna Paley and Baron Nicholas de Gunzburg, moved to the U.S. After several stops, he found a job through Diana Vreeland in Hollywood with Paul Flato, then the “jeweler to the stars.” Soon he was signing his work and helping Flato cultivate the crème de la creme of the silver screen — those both on it and behind it.

Verdura left Los Angeles for New York and opened his own salon, first on Fifth Avenue in 1939, just as World War II was beginning in Europe. His backers were Vincent Astor and Cole Porter, for whom he made bejeweled boxes and cigarette cases — gifts from Porter’s wife, Linda — to commemorate the opening nights of several musicals. Verdura began to expand both his repertoire — he became much more daring and flamboyant — and his clientele. The Duchess of Windsor, Daisy Fellowes, Greta Garbo and others routinely gave him commissions. In 1941, Verdura collaborated on a collection of six pieces with Salvador Dalí to accompany a Dalí exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. Verdura retired in 1972 and left the care of the company to his partner, Joseph Alfano. He later moved to London, where he died in 1978 at the age of 79.

Among the most prized pieces on display in a 2014 Verdura jewelry exhibition in New York were Greta Garbo’s curb-link bracelet watch, which Verdura designed for her in 1939; Coco Chanel’s pair of Maltese Cross cuff bracelets (she wore one on each wrist); and Diana Vreeland’s duo of Byzantine brooches.

Find a range of authentic Verdura jewelry today on 1stDibs.