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Verdura Candy Ring

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Verdura Candy Blue Topaz Pink Tourmaline Gold Cocktail Ring
By Verdura
Located in Lambertville, NJ
18k gold Candy cocktail ring by Verdura, with blue topaz and pink tourmalines. Ring size 4 (sizing
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian More Rings

Materials

Topaz, Tourmaline, Blue Topaz, Gold

Verdura Gold Coral Rose Cut Diamond Candy Ring
By Verdura
Located in Palm Beach, FL
Verdura "Candy" ring in 18k yellow gold, coral and rose-cut diamonds. Polished gold mounting set
Category

2010s Italian Modern Fashion Rings

Materials

Coral, Diamond, Gold, 18k Gold

Verdura 'Candy' Amethyst and Tourmaline Ring
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
Authentic Verdura 'Candy' ring is one of Fulco di Verdura's earliest and most iconic designs
Category

2010s Contemporary Fashion Rings

Materials

Amethyst, Tourmaline, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold

Verdura Turquoise Amethyst Gold Candy Ring
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
Vibrant amethyst, turquoise and 18K yellow gold ring from the "Candy" collection by Verdura. It
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Cocktail Rings

Materials

Amethyst, Turquoise, 18k Gold

VERDURA Yellow Gold, Blue Topaz and Iolite "Candy" Ring
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
An 18 karat yellow gold, blue topaz and iolite ring, Verdura, Italian The “Candy” ring centering a
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Italian Dome Rings

Materials

Iolite, Topaz, Blue Topaz, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold

Verdura Rubellite Gold "Candy" Ring
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
This exquisite rubelite and 18-karat yellow gold "Candy" ring was hand crafted in Italy
Category

Vintage 1970s Italian Modernist Dome Rings

Materials

Rubelite, 18k Gold

VERDURA Candy Gold Citrine Pink Tourmaline Ring
By Verdura
Located in Lambertville, NJ
Metal:18K Yellow Gold, Marked:Verdura, 750, Made In Italy Gemstone/Diamonds:Citrine Pink
Category

Italian More Rings

VERUDRA "Candy" Tiger's Eye Ring with Chrome Tourmaline
By Verdura
Located in Greenwich, CT
"Candy" tiger's eye ring in 18k yellow gold with chrome tourmaline accents. Signed Verdura.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Cocktail Rings

Materials

Tourmaline, 18k Gold

1980s Verdura Cabochon Citrine and Pink Tourmaline Gold Candy Ring
By Verdura
Located in New York, NY
Verdura In Italy In The 1980's.NOTE:These Candy Rings Are Rare To find In The Second Hand Market.
Category

Vintage 1980s Italian Dome Rings

Materials

Citrine, Tourmaline, 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.

Finding the Right rings for You

Antique and vintage rings have long held a special place in the hearts of fine jewelry lovers all over the world.

No matter their origin or specific characteristics, rings are timeless, versatile accessories. They’ve carried deep meaning since at least the Middle Ages, when diamond rings symbolized strength and other kinds of rings were worn to signify romantic feelings or to denote an affiliation with a religious order. Rings have also forever been emblematic of eternity.

Over time, rings have frequently taken the form of serpents, which have long been associated with eternal life, health and renewal. Italian luxury jewelry house Bulgari has become famous for its widely loved Serpenti motif, for example, and its Serpenti ring, like the other accessories in the collection, began as an homage to jewelry of the Roman and Hellenistic eras. The serpent is now a popular motif in fine jewelry. Jewelry devotees have long pined for rings adorned with reptiles, thanks to antique Victorian rings — well, specifically, Queen Victoria’s illustrious engagement ring, which took the form of a gold snake set with rubies, diamonds and an emerald (her birthstone). Designs for Victorian-era engagement rings often featured repoussé work and chasing, in which patterns are hammered into the metal.

Engagement rings, which are reliably intimidating to shop for, are still widely recognized as symbols of love and commitment. On 1stDibs, a range of buying guides can be found for those in the market for antique engagement ringsvintage engagement rings or Art Deco engagement rings

The most collectible antique engagement rings and vintage engagement rings are those from the Victorian, Edwardian and Art Deco eras. Named for the monarchies of the four King Georges, who in succession ruled England starting in 1714 (plus King William’s reign), antique Georgian rings, be they engagement rings or otherwise, are also coveted by collectors. Pearls, along with colored gemstones like garnets, rubies and sapphires, were widely used in Georgian jewelry. The late-1700s paste jewelry was a predecessor to what we now call fashion or costume jewelry

The Art Nouveau movement (1880–1910) brought with it rings inspired by the natural world. Antique Art Nouveau rings might feature depictions of winged insects and fauna as well as women, who were simultaneously eroticized and romanticized, frequently with long flowing hair. Art Deco jewelry, on the other hand, which originated during the 1920s and ’30s, is by and large “white jewelry.” White metals, primarily platinum, were favored over yellow gold in the design of antique Art Deco rings and other accessories as well as geometric motifs, with women drawn to the era’s dazzling cocktail rings in particular.

Whether you’re hunting down a chunky classic for a Prohibition-themed cocktail party or seeking a clean contemporary design to complement your casual ensemble, find an exquisite collection of antique, new and vintage rings on 1stDibs.