Emerald Rings
20th Century American Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, Ruby, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Late 20th Century American Modern Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, 18k Gold
1930s Vintage Emerald Rings
Emerald, Diamond, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold, Platinum
1840s Unknown Antique Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, 9k Gold, Yellow Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, 18k Gold, White Gold
21st Century and Contemporary Portuguese Contemporary Emerald Rings
Diamond, White Diamond, Ruby, Gold, Yellow Gold
1980s Unknown Modernist Vintage Emerald Rings
Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Ruby, Emerald, Diamond, White Gold, 18k Gold
Early 2000s Unknown Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, Gold, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
2010s Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, 18k Gold, White Gold, Yellow Gold
1980s European Retro Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold
1950s Italian Contemporary Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, Ruby, Sapphire, 18k Gold, Yellow Gold
Late 20th Century Italian Art Nouveau Emerald Rings
Diamond, White Diamond, Emerald, Ruby, Sapphire, Blue Sapphire, Yellow S...
1980s European Retro Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, Ruby, 18k Gold
1980s European Retro Vintage Emerald Rings
Emerald, Ruby, Sapphire, 14k Gold
1970s Contemporary Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, White Diamond, Emerald, Gold, 14k Gold, Yellow Gold
1980s Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, Ruby, 18k Gold
1980s American Vintage Emerald Rings
Diamond, Emerald, Sapphire, Platinum
Shopping for Antique and Vintage Emerald Rings?
Do you have your heart set on a vintage emerald ring? That’s not surprising — emerald engagement rings, antique emerald cocktail rings and other rings set with the vibrant stone are sophisticated and glamorous, and that verdant color, and the cachet of wielding a gem beloved and worn by so many queens and princesses (hello, Cleopatra!), could seduce anyone.
Dorothy may have worn ruby slippers, but it was the Emerald City that she was trying to get to. Upon her arrival, she was advised to wear green-tinted eyeglasses to protect her eyes from all the “brightness and glory” in L. Frank Baum’s book The Wizard of Oz. Jewelry lovers born in May can wear their beautiful birthstone, distinguished by its rich green color, on their way to see the Wizard or any other magical place.
While emeralds graced the engagement rings of style icons Wallis Simpson and Jackie Kennedy — and emeralds and yellow diamonds are adding boldness to today’s engagement rings — perhaps no one liked emeralds and emerald jewelry more than Elizabeth Taylor (or her alter ego, Cleopatra).
During the December 2011 auction of Taylor’s jewels that was held at Christie’s, there was a suite of emerald jewels that had been by Bulgari and gifted to the actress by Richard Burton to commemorate their engagement (no celebrity, or civilian for that matter, can rival Taylor in her fervor for Bvlgari). The suite consisted of an emerald and diamond ring, an emerald and flower diamond brooch, an emerald and diamond necklace, an emerald and diamond pendant brooch, a pair of emerald and diamond ear pendants and an emerald and diamond bracelet.
New York–based jewelry designer Nina Runsdorf, whose mother and grandmother both had emerald engagement rings, suggests that the stone’s color might appeal to those with an affinity for nature. “My parents left the city when I was 14 and raised us on a farm in upstate New York, so my mother’s love of nature was very strong,” she says. “I think emeralds reminded her of the wild grass and trees.”
Emeralds were first discovered in Egypt around 330 BC. The stone’s name originated from the ancient Greek word for green, “smaragdus.” According to the Gemological Institute of America, “Emeralds from what is now Colombia were part of the plunder when 16th-century Spanish explorers invaded the New World. The Incas had already been using emeralds in their jewelry and religious ceremonies for 500 years. The Spaniards, who treasured gold and silver far more than gems, traded emeralds for precious metals. Their trades opened the eyes of European and Asian royalty to emerald’s majesty.”
There are many important (read: large) emeralds in museum collections around the world. The Patricia Emerald, named after the miner’s daughter, is a 632-carat dihexagonal (or 12-sided) crystal that was discovered in Colombia in 1920 and now resides at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. The Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington has in its possession the Hooker Emerald, a 75.47-carat Colombian stone. That emerald had been acquired in the 16th or 17th century by Spanish conquistadores and shipped to Europe. It later belonged to Abdul Hamid II, Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1876–1909), who wore it on his belt buckle. Purchased at auction by Tiffany & Co. in 1911, the Hooker Emerald was set into a tiara and featured in the New York World’s Fair “House of Jewels” exhibit in 1940. Today, it is part of a brooch, also designed by the legendary jewelry house.
Find a range of antique and vintage emerald rings on 1stDibs.