Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Known as “the jewelers’ jeweler,” Oscar Heyman (1888–1970) designed pieces for Cartier, Tiffany & Co., Van Cleef & Arpels, Harry Winston and Black, Starr & Frost. The family-run Oscar Heyman & Brothers jewelry company was founded by Heyman with his brothers Nathan and Harry in 1912. Jewelers from Latvia, they had trained at their great-uncle’s workshop, which had clients including Russian imperial jeweler Fabergé, before immigrating to the United States in the early 1900s.
After arriving in New York, Oscar worked with Pierre Cartier and Nathan was a tool maker at Western Electric before they came together to open their jewelry business. Highly skilled craftsmen, the Heyman brothers quickly developed a roster of high-profile clients — primarily big-name jewelers — drawn to their work with dazzling stones and meticulous design. In 1917, Black, Starr & Frost commissioned the brothers to design an American flag brooch, which would become a recurring motif in the Oscar Heyman & Brothers portfolio. They also designed the Pansy brooch in the 1930s, another long-popular accessory that was produced exclusively for Tiffany & Co. toward the end of the 20th century. After Heyman designed for four of the five jewelers on view at the 1939 World’s Fair House of Jewels (Cartier, Udall & Ballou, Marcus & Co. and Black, Starr & Frost), the company was given the moniker “the jewelers’ jeweler.”
Heyman & Brothers later designed gem-encrusted medallions that traveled to the moon on Apollo 16, the necklace setting for the 69-carat diamond Richard Burton gave Elizabeth Taylor in 1969 and even a pair of ruby-encrusted Stuart Weitzman stilettos in 2003. Over the years, the company has entranced such clients as Evelyn Lauder, Marjorie Merriweather Post, Billy Porter and Tina Fey with its pieces.
In 2012, the century-old jeweler underwent a rebranding to simplify its name to Oscar Heyman and today is still run by the Heyman family, which manages the whole process from alloying their own metal to cutting and polishing their gemstones to assembling the final product in-house. In 2017, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston published a monograph authored by Yvonne J. Markowitz and Elizabeth Hamilton that details for a broader audience the history of Oscar Heyman, an unsung company that’s long been behind some of the biggest names in jewelry.
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21st Century and Contemporary American Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond
21st Century and Contemporary American Artist Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary American Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold, Gold
Early 18th Century Renaissance Antique Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, 14k Gold
1920s Unknown Art Deco Vintage Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Platinum
19th Century Russian Antique Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, Gold, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
Early 20th Century English Art Deco Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold, Platinum
2010s American Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, Platinum
21st Century and Contemporary Modern Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sterling Silver
Late 19th Century Russian Russian Empire Antique Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Sapphire, Gold, 14k Gold, Enamel
21st Century and Contemporary Modern Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Tanzanite, Sterling Silver, 18k Gold
21st Century and Contemporary American Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Blue Diamond, Black Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold, White Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Art Deco Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, White Gold
Early 20th Century British Empire Oscar Heyman Cufflinks
Diamond, Blue Sapphire, 14k Gold, White Gold, Platinum