Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Crystal, Gilt Metal
Late 20th Century American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s Unknown Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Enamel
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Art Deco Vintage Ciner Earrings
Rhodium
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
Mid-20th Century American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1970s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1960s American Baroque Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
20th Century American Art Deco Vintage Ciner Earrings
1960s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1990s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
1990s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
20th Century American Art Deco Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Art Nouveau Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
20th Century American Art Deco Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1960s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Crystal, Silver Plate, Gilt Metal
1960s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1990s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1990s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Anglo-Indian Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1960s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1940s American Retro Vintage Ciner Earrings
Topaz, Gold Plate, Sterling Silver
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
Mid-20th Century American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1980s Vintage Ciner Earrings
Mid-20th Century American Vintage Ciner Earrings
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Modern Vintage Ciner Earrings
20th Century Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Crystal, Gilt Metal
1980s American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1970s American Retro Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
1980s American Contemporary Vintage Ciner Earrings
Enamel, Gilt Metal
20th Century American Art Deco Vintage Ciner Earrings
Tiger's Eye
20th Century American Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gold Plate
1960s American Artisan Vintage Ciner Earrings
Gilt Metal
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Vintage Ciner Earrings For Sale on 1stDibs
How Much are Vintage Ciner Earrings?
Ciner for sale on 1stDibs
What defines “fine” jewelry? For many aficionados, there’s a clear line separating the golden wheat from the gilded chaff. But the handcrafted pieces made by Ciner, a 128-year-old costume jewelry house with a glittering past to rival some of the hautest high jewelers, call into question our notions of what constitutes preciousness.
Quality? Craftsmanship? Painstaking detail? Vintage Ciner earrings, brooches, necklaces and other accessories have them all in spades.
Much of the Ciner’s allure can be traced to its origins in fine jewelry. Emanuel Ciner, an Austrian immigrant, founded the firm in Manhattan in 1892, crafting pieces from the traditional precious gems, gold and platinum. But World War I and the Great Depression caused purse strings to tighten and materials to become scarce. Rather than try to weather the economic downturn, which shuttered many other American jewelers, Ciner made the risky transition from fine jewelry to costume (or fashion) jewelry — virtually uncharted territory.
Emanuel Ciner’s sons, Irwin and Charles, introduced an array of innovations — rubber casting molds, which are especially durable and produce higher quality results, and white metal alloys, which affordably mimic the look of more precious materials — that would become the standard for costume jewelry. During World War II, Ciner’s advanced molding technology was utilized by the U.S. military to produce munitions and tools. This arrangement gave the firm access to the heavily rationed metals it needed for its jewels, enabling it again to endure conditions that drove others into bankruptcy.
The company hit its stride in the 1960s, when its jewelry was sold at some of the country’s toniest stores, even garnering an Andy Warhol–illustrated ad for Bonwit Teller. Its pieces were worn by the era’s brightest stars. In the famous 1957 Joe Shere photo of Sophia Loren sneering at Jayne Mansfield’s décolletage, Mansfield is resplendent in shoulder-grazing Ciner earrings.
Ciner is unique among costume jewelers in that its pieces aren’t imitations — they are coveted in their own right. Elizabeth Taylor, a voracious jewelry collector with a taste for the very finest, was a longtime client. Several suites of Ciner jewels were included in the 2011 Christie’s sale of Taylor’s collection, with one group of rhinestone-studded ear clips and a bracelet fetching $15,600 — more than 100 times the auction estimate. It’s a reminder of a time, not so long ago, when women of great style wore fine and costume jewelry with equal aplomb, often at the same time.
Today, Ciner — now run by Emanuel Ciner’s granddaughter Pat Ciner Hill and great-granddaughter Jean Hill — continues to adhere to the same exacting production specifications. It is the only jewelry house in New York, and likely the United States, that manufactures all its pieces entirely in-house. Each begins with dozens of elements that are cast in rubber molds and then individually filed and polished, plated in a particularly thick layer of 18-karat gold or rhodium, assembled on the bench and painted with enamel or set with stones. Every step is performed by hand by craftsmen, many of whom have been with the company for more than 30 years.
Find vintage Ciner clip-on earrings, choker necklaces, bracelets and other jewelry on 1stDibs.
Finding the Right earrings for You
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.